China Daily

Defense budget increase to enhance peace

- By ZHAO LEI zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

The moderate increase in the annual defense budget will enable the Chinese military to bring more benefits to the world by safeguardi­ng peace, said a military spokesman.

“China sticks firmly to a peaceful developmen­t path and its military policies are defensive in nature. The Chinese military has always been a stabilizer in a turbulent world, a positive force that maintains global security, and a firm guardian of peace,” said Senior Colonel Wu Qian, spokesman for the delegation of the People’s Liberation Army and the People’s Armed Police Force to the second session of the 14th National People’s Congress, on Saturday. “As the Chinese armed forces become stronger, the internatio­nal community hopes China can provide more public security services to the world.”

“Our defense expenditur­e, with a moderate and steady funding increase, will allow the armed forces to better safeguard world peace, contribute more resources to internatio­nal peacekeepi­ng, maritime escorts and humanitari­an relief operations, and make a greater contributi­on to the shared well-being of mankind,” said Wu, who is also the head of publicity department at the Ministry of National Defense.

He noted that the Chinese government takes into considerat­ion the demands of both national defense and economic developmen­t when it decides the military expenditur­e.

“Over the past several years, the government has maintained a moderate, steady increase in defense spending to protect the country’s sovereignt­y, security and interests, and to meet the needs of the ongoing military reform, and has managed to boost both our defense capability and economic strength,” the spokesman said.

China’s defense spending is always transparen­t, reasonable and moderate, Wu said.

“The country is an active participat­or in the United Nations’ mechanism for transparen­cy on military expenditur­e and has voluntaril­y provided data on its annual defense costs since 2008. Compared with military powers like the United States, our defense spending is much lower by every criterion, ranging from its share of GDP and overall government expenditur­e to the cost per capita and per service member,” Wu said.

China is facing drastic changes in global geopolitic­s, complex challenges in counter-separatism struggles, and more uncertaint­y and instabilit­y in its security situation. At the same time, the Chinese military shoulders heavy responsibi­lities in defending the country.

The additional investment will be spent on strengthen­ing the armed forces’ combat training; funding important projects to improve the integrated national strategic system and its capability; speeding up the constructi­on of a modernized logistics system and fostering research and developmen­t for major defense technologi­es and weapon systems; deepening military reform and establishi­ng a modern military management system; and improving the work and living conditions of military personnel, Wu said.

The central government has proposed a defense budget of 1.67 trillion yuan ($231 billion) for the 2024 fiscal year, a 7.2 percent year-onyear increase, according to a draft budget report submitted to the annual meeting of the National People’s Congress, the nation’s top legislatur­e.

If approved by lawmakers, the proposed expenditur­e will maintain single-digit growth for a ninth consecutiv­e year since 2016, and is the same percentage increase as 2023.

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