China has said it would increase its defence spending by 7.2 percent in 2023, compared with 7.1 percent last year, as its outgoing premier warned of growing “external” threats to Beijing’s rise.
The country is expected to spend 1.55 trillion yuan ($225 billion) on defence this year, according to a report by the Ministry of Finance published on the opening day of the annual session of the country’s rubber-stamp parliament.
The increase is a shade higher than last year and broadly in line with the general pace of annual growth, but exceeds the annual GDP growth target of around five percent announced in a separate report.
Beijing’s military budget is the second-largest in the world after the United States and last year stood at 1.45 trillion yuan ($210 billion), though many overseas analysts say much more money is spent than the officially announced sums.
China’s defence spending still pales in comparison with the United States, which has allotted over $800 billion for its military this year.
Beijing has funnelled billions of dollars into modernising defence in recent years, aiming to transform its huge military into a world-class force rivalling the US and other Western powers.
Military tensions have ramped up in the past year between China and the US, in particular over the status of Taiwan.
Washington diplomatically recognises China over Taiwan, but maintains de facto relations with Taipei and supports the island’s right to decide its own future.
In a separate speech to present the government’s work report on Sunday, China’s outgoing Premier Li Keqiang warned that “external attempts to suppress and contain China are escalating”.
“The armed forces should intensify military training and preparedness across the board devote greater energy to training under combat conditions, and strengthen military work in all directions and domains,” he said.
Li made a standard reference to opposing “separatism” in Taiwan and formal independence for the island, repeating Beijing’s long-held position.
“We should promote the peaceful development of cross-Strait relations and advance the process of China’s peaceful reunification,” he said.
China has also butted heads with Japan over competing claims to the uninhabited Senkaku Islands — known as the Diaoyu in Chinese — and has engaged in deadly brawls with Indian soldiers over stretches of disputed territory high in the Himalayas.
AFP