Councils in Devon are hoping to secure extra cash to replace funding they used to receive from the EU, but figures suggest there will be far less money available than before Brexit.

South Hams District Council is applying for funding from the Shared Prosperity Fund.

South Hams District Council is applying for £1,062,300 over three years

Councillors will discuss the application for funding at the council’s executive meeting next Thursday.

The UK Shared Prosperity Fund (UKSPF) has been set up to replace four funds which were granted by the EU when the UK was still a member:

The European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), which focuses mainly on support to small businesses and on research and innovation.

The European Social Fund (ESF), which is very strongly focused on employment by building networks between employers, local authorities and charities and improving people’s skills.

The European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development (EAFRD), which funds improvements in agriculture as part of the EU’s Common Agricultural Policy.

The European Maritime and Fisheries Fund (EMFF), a much smaller fund supporting improvements in fisheries.

The funds were distributed through the Multi-annual Financial Framework (MFF) in seven-year cycles.

In the 2014–20 MFF, the UK as a whole was allocated £9.4 billion in structural funds (£5 billion through the ERDF and £4.4 billion through the ESF). This was supplemented by an additional £7.2 billion in ‘match funding’ provided domestically: An average total of £2.4 billionn per year.

The UK government has pledged to ramp up UKSPF investment, so that total domestic UK-wide funding will at least match current EU receipts and says the UKSPF is a central pillar of its levelling up agenda and part of its support for places throughout the UK.

The UKSPF will provide £2.6 billion of funding for local investment across the UK over a three-year period until March 2025, focusing on building pride in place and increasing life chances across the UK, as outlined in the government’s Levelling Up White Paper. This equates to just £870 million per year; far short of the £2.4 billion average annual combined funds available before Brexit.