China’s Military Spending Rises Should Prompt Regional Budget Responses
ASPI
APLN member Rajeswari Pillai Rajagopalan observed that China’s rapidly increasing defence budget reflects its expanding military ambitions and heightened geopolitical assertiveness. She argued that regional countries must increase their defence spending to counterbalance China’s growing military power and deter further aggression.
China likes to mention that the 2025 defence budget is the 10th in a row to show single-digit percentage growth. Yet these growth rates are still large by international standards and build on the much larger expansions of earlier years. In 2014, China had a 12.2 percent increase in defence spending, declining to 10.1 percent in 2015 and to 7.6 percent in 2016.
The opaqueness of China’s military spending is a particular cause for concern.
China usually attributes the increase in spending to the various military exercises it is engaged in as well as maintenance and upkeep of its military forces. The implication is that the increments are mostly going to salaries and pensions. It is true Chinese military personnel numbers are very large, but its equipment is improving dramatically. Just this last year, China demonstrated two new stealth fighters; a stealth bomber is in the works. And China is building a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier that will rival the latest US carriers in size.
The government’s Xinhua News Agency justifies China’s defence budget as paying for a ‘national defense policy that is defensive in nature, with its military spending mainly focusing on protecting its sovereignty, security and development interests … and the country will never seek hegemony or engage in expansionism no matter what stage of development it reaches.’
But China’s actions do not suggest a purely defensive motivation. Such claims should be no more truthful than Vladimir Putin’s claims that Russia’s military build-ups on the Russian border with Ukraine in 2021 and 2022 were only exercises.
When China sends its naval forces to intimidate neighbours and engages in military exercises that suddenly force rerouting of commercial flights, more regional countries should speak up. And the type of language that Beijing understands is an increase in our own defence spending.
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Image: Wikimedia Commons