Carter: Politics, economy to affect DoD spending

Reuters reports that Undersecretary Ashton Carter, the Pentagon\'s head of acquisition, told industry officials that politics, the sluggish economy, and the size of...

The Defense Department will have a hard time committing to any real growth in spending. Undersecretary Ashton Carter, the Pentagon’s head of acquisition, told industry officials that politics, the sluggish economy, and the size of the deficit might affect funding in the near future, Reuters reports.

This was the first time Carter had publicly acknowledged that political and economic realities might impact actual funding.

Carter also met separately with industry and defense officials to say he’s still hopeful cuts in overhead might preserve a projected 1 percent real growth in the overall defense budget over the next five years.

Some industry officials have been increasingly skeptical that the Pentagon can keep that promise. There are also concerns over cuts or cancellations to several big contracts.

A lot of the big DoD suppliers have been working closely with the military in its cost-cutting drive because they hope it will preserve funding for new weapons programs.

This story is part of Federal News Radio’s daily DoD Report. For more defense news, click here.

Copyright © 2025 Federal News Network. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Getty Images/pabradyphotoInternal Revenue Service sign

    IRS ‘prepared’ for 2025 filing season, but potential spending cuts loom for the agency

    Read more
    Alyson Fligg/Labor DepartmentClare Martorana

    Why OMB’s human-centered policy design effort is paying off

    Read more
    Congress Budget

    Congress unveils funding deal with more than $100 billion in disaster aid

    Read more