China Slows Military Spending Growth as Economy Weakens
Smallest Single Year Increase Expected Since 2010
by Jason Ditz,
The common modern narrative of keeping military spending pegged to a certain percentage of GDP has given way to years of double-digit spending increases in China, but those seem to be coming to an end, with the next military budget expected to grow at a slower rate, reflective of an economic slowdown.
China’s military has the second largest budget in the world, though only a fraction of the United States’ spending. China, however, has kept their GDP percentage comparatively low, a healthy 1.3%, while the United States is spending well in excess of 3% of its GDP on military, and plans a near 10% increase in 2018 despite GDP growth being only in the 2.2% range.
As with the US military and it’s record spending, there’s never an increase that’s “enough” by the brass’ reckoning, and reports are already quoting a lot of Chinese military figures unhappy with the mere 7% increase in spending, believing it is insufficient.
http://news.antiwar.com/2017/03/05/china-slows-military-spending-growth-as-economy-weakens/

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