China, the second-largest military spender after the US, has hiked its defense budget from last year’s 177.6 billion to US$ 179 billion - nearly three times that of India, the lowest increment in recent years apparently due to the heavy disruption caused to its economy by the COVID-19, according to the official media.
China, which has the world’s largest military of two million troops, will continue to lower its defense budget growth rate to 6.6% in 2020, according to a draft budget report presented on Friday to National People’s Congress (NPC), the country’s top legislature.
The 2020 defense budget continues to see single-digit growth for a fifth consecutive year. It is the lowest growth rate in recent years, the state-run Xinhua news agency reported.
China’s this year’s defense budget will be around 1.27 trillion Yuan (about US$ 179 billion) against last year’s 177.61 billion, according to the draft submitted to the NPC.
China’s total defense spending in 2019 only amounted to a quarter that of the United States, the world’s largest defense spender, while the per capita expenditure was just about one-seventeenth, the report said.
On Thursday Zhang Yesui, spokesperson for the NPC in a media briefing played down criticism about lack of transparency in China’s defense expenditure which defense analysts say considering the rapid expansion of Beijing’s military and modern weapons is far higher than what is announced.
Zhang said China had no “hidden military spending”. China has been submitting reports on its military expenditures to the United Nations every year since 2007, he stressed.
“From where the money comes from to how the money is used, everything is accounted for,” Zhang said.
According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), the military expenditure figures of China’s defense spending in 2019 amounted to US$ 232 billion.
While China compares its defense expenditure with the US, whose defense budget according to SIPRI was US$ 732 billion, Beijing’s massive defense modernization drive is pushing India and a number of other countries to hike their own defense budgets to ensure reasonable balance of power.
India’s budget for 2020 amounted to US$ 66.9 billion according to a write-up in Indian Institute for Defense and Analysis, (IDSA). China’s latest budget of US$ 179 billion is about 2.7 times more that of India.
China’s defense spending has been staying at around 1.3% of its gross domestic product for many years, well below the world’s average of 2.6%, Zhang said.
China’s defense budget in recent years acquired limelight as it embarked on a massive modernization which included a number of aircraft carriers, stealth aircraft, and rapid development of modern naval frigates.
Since Chinese President Xi Jinping came to power, China has revamped its defense forces, cutting the army by three lakh troops and enhanced its naval and air power as Beijing expanded its influence abroad.
China currently has one aircraft carrier; the second one is undergoing trials while the third is being built. According to official media reports, China plans to have five to six aircraft carriers in near future to challenge the US all around the world including in Beijing’s backyard the South China Sea (SCS).
China claims all most all of the SCS as its territory. Vietnam, Philippines, Malaysia Brunei and Taiwan have counterclaims on it.
China is engaged in hotly contested territorial disputes in both the South China Sea and the East China Sea. Beijing has built up and militarized many of the islands and reefs it controls in the region. Both areas are stated to be rich in minerals, oil and other natural resources and are also vital to global trade.