On Monday, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) updated its Military Expenditure Database for 2023 as top spenders such as the United States, China and Russia ratcheted up their military budgets.
Military spending is up in Africa, the Middle East, Europe, Asia, Oceania, and North and South America. It’s the first time since 2009 that annual spending was up in all geographical regions examined by SIPRI at once.
With a budget up 105%, the stood out as the country with the single largest increase in military spending in 2023 by percentage. Researchers attributed this to the between the government and nonstate armed groups.
‘Scale and scope’
Xiao Liang, a researcher in SIPRI’s military expenditure and arms production program, told DW that “what might be surprising is how large the increases are in the rest of the world, especially in Latin America and Africa.”
Liang said the governments of Mexico and El Salvador were using the military for internal affairs such as combating and . Ecuador and Brazil are showing similarly concerning trends, he added.
“The increase itself is not too surprising, but it’s the scale and scope of the increase,” Liang said. “For the global trend, if the current conflicts and tensions continue, we will probably see more increase in the coming years.”
Ukraine-Russia war spending
Ukraine has remained a conflict hot spot since .
At 5.9% in 2023, Liang said, Russia’s military spending in relation to its gross domestic product (GDP) reached its highest point since the end of the Soviet Union.
By comparison, Ukraine’s military spending was 37% of its GDP. “So the war is burdening Ukraine much more than Russia,” Liang said. The bare numbers highlight that the fight between Russia and Ukraine is imbalanced, but has helped Ukraine level the playing field, preliminary SIPRI reports indicate.
“From the spending trend last year, all but three countries in increased their spending,” Liang said. “And also we’ve seen the most number of countries, in 11 out of 31 members in NATO, that met or exceeded the 2% GDP target, which is the highest since the end of the Cold War. We expect to see more countries reaching their targets in the next few years. Now also, with , I think the spending by NATO countries as a whole will keep rising.”
China’s regional conflicts
The conflict between also drove up military spending in 2023. China increased military expenditures by 6% from the previous year, allocating about $296 billion to the military in 2023. That’s about half of the overall military expenditure across the Asia and Oceania regions. Liang said China was directing most of its growing military budget toward increasing the combat readiness of its People’s Liberation Army.
“We are clearly seeing that trend because, if you look at spending, it has been rising for 29 consecutive years,” Liang said. “That’s the longest streak recorded by a single country. It’s mostly actually increasing set alongside the pace of its economic growth, regardless of fluctuations in geopolitical tensions or global crisis such as the war in Ukraine or COVID.”
Liang said China’s military modernization had prompted countries such as Japan, Taiwan and India to increase their military spending. Japan and Taiwan both raised their military spending by 11%, to $50.2 billion and $16.6 billion, respectively.
Regional spillover fears
Another noteworthy development in SIPRI’s database is increased military spending. Marked by internal violence and spillover effects from the civil war in neighboring Sudan, the world’s youngest nation increased military spending by 78% compared from 2022.
Countries across Europe spent another year fearing security threats from Russia. Poland increased its military spending the most of all European countries, by 75% from 2022, to $31.6 billion in total.
In the Middle East, Iran is the fourth-biggest military spender, with a budget of $10.3 billion.
Global ‘militaristic framework’
Niklas Schörnig, a political scientist at the Peace Research Institute Frankfurt (PRIF), told DW: “We live in an age when military security has became a priority again and security is defined in a militaristic framework. In this sense, these numbers are just a reflection of that mindset.”
Pointing to Ukraine and the recent exchange of blows between Iran and Israel, Schörnig also noted that defense was far most costly than an offensive. “Take the drones that Iran is delivering to Russia, for example, and that ,” he said. “Organizing that kind of defense is hugely cost-intensive.”
Schörnig, who is PRIF’s senior researcher in international security, said conflicts such as the war in Ukraine were proof that the logic of disarmament has reached its limits. Instead, he said, the world has entered a new era in which armament is spiraling out of control as most arms control agreements are outdated or no longer in use.
To counter this, Schörnig proposed a new international goal. “States need to return to controlled armament,” he said. “They need to agree not to arm themselves above a certain level. This could de-escalate things a bit. Arms controls could be an interim goal, a way to limit and stabilize armament, and avoid everyone wildly arming themselves however they like.”
It’s likely that SIPRI’s report on military expenditures in 2024 will once find an increase in spending. In 2023, and tensions in the wider region led to the highest annual growth in military spending the Middle East had seen in 10 years.
In the Middle East, total military expenditure grew by 9% and amounted to $200 billion. Israel’s military spending alone spiked by 24% to $27.5 billion, second only to Saudi Arabia.
Schörnig said he had a pessimistic outlook. “If the general political climate doesn’t change, I don’t believe the current upward trend in armament will come to an end,” he said. “This would only be possible if Ukraine achieved a peace agreement that didn’t divide the country,” he added.
He said he also hoped that the United States and China could negotiate to keep the regional conflict with Taiwan under control.
Even if they could, he said, “this current geopolitical situation is like a powder keg, and SIPRI’s numbers reflect just that.”
This article was originally written in German.
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