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Tuesday April 23, 2024

China likely to hike military budget as tensions rise

By News Desk
February 27, 2021

HONG KONG/BEIJING: China is expected to reveal a robust increase in defence spending at the March 5 annual opening of parliament, as its economy rebounds from the COVID-19 pandemic and military tensions rise, Chinese and Western security experts said.

With the coronavirus hammering its economy, China last year announced a 6.6 per cent boost in defence spending to $178 billion, the lowest rate of increase in three decades.

The new administration of President Joe Biden has moved quickly to remind Beijing that the United States intends to compete with China’s growing influence and military strength in the Asia-Pacific. In recent weeks, powerful US warship fleets have sailed near Chinese-claimed Taiwan and through disputed territory in the South China Sea, to Beijing’s anger.

“China is facing the most severe security situation since the Korean War,” said Ni Lexiong, a retired professor at the Shanghai University of Political Science and Law. He predicts a substantial hike in China’s military budget, citing US arms sales to Taiwan, regular deployments of US aircraft carriers off the China coast and the recent presence of a French warship and nuclear submarine in the South China Sea.

“Looking at public opinion, it has become more urgent to take back Taiwan militarily. That is why the budget will surely rise sharply,” he said. Ross Babbage, a non-resident fellow at the Washington-based Centre for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments and former Australian defence official, expects a rise of about 7%.

“That is less than some people might expect and the reason for that is the Chinese economy is still not in great shape.”

China’s economy grew just 2.3% in 2020, although it was the only major economy not to contract, and is expected to see growth of 8.4% percent this year, a media poll found.

China’s Defence Ministry did not respond to a request for comment.

Many Western experts believe Beijing’s real military outlays are far higher than official figures.

China’s published military spending for 2019 was $174 billion adjusted for inflation, or 1.3 per cent of GDP, according to an annual Pentagon report in September. That excludes outlays on research and development and foreign weapons buying, and the Pentagon estimated that real spending in 2019 could be more than $200 billion.

The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute estimated China spent $261 billion on its military in 2019. The United States spent $732 billion, or about 3.4% of GDP, on its military in 2019.

If Beijing does announce a sharp increase, it would signal an intention to intensify military operations against Taiwan or assert Chinese sovereignty over other disputed territory in the South China Sea or East China Sea, Babbage and other Western analysts said.