England too focused on beating All Blacks - Clive Woodward
Last year's rise of eight per cent also included an uplift of £3.2 million following the deal with the players that sees each member of the 23-man squad receive £22,000 in total fees per match as part of a lucrative four-year deal that will see them share a jackpot of more than £20 million.
Player payments last season soared by 30 per cent, taking their combined total to more than £5.5 million - up £1.2 million from the previous season alone.
And while the figures for the total professional game budget also include spending on women's rugby, sevens, academies, the Championship, sports science, medicine, anti-doping, events and competitions, it is clear that the RFU is not afraid to match its stated ambition to win the World Cup with its financial muscle.
It is here they will have a big advantage over every other nation at the tournament. Their total number of players also dwarfs New Zealand; last year there were 382,154 registered players in England. In New Zealand there were about 155,000.
Steve Brown, the RFU chief executive, said: "Eddie already has quite detailed and comprehensive plans in place to build up to 2019 and we already know what the costs of those things are and have already factored them into our financial plans.
"We are already preparing for it. Our ambition is the same as Eddie's. We want to win this [the World Cup in Japan] and we will do what we need to do to win it.
"The key to that is really comprehensive planning two years out, as we are now, and making sure we fund all the things that need to be funded that are going to make it happen. It is a significant number but it is complicated. There is a taste of it in the professional game figure [£63.7 million] that is in the [annual] report."