The Free Press Journal

China to hike defence budget by 10 per cent

- K J M VARMA

Notwithsta­nding its slowing economy, China is set to hike its defence expenditur­e by around 10 per cent, posting a double-digit annual increase in its proposed military spending for the fifth year in a row.

Amid territoria­l and maritime disputes with its neighbours, the world's largest military continues to maintain high defence spending to modernise its military in a bid to catch up with the US.

China's proposed defence expenditur­e is expected to be about $145 billion, overshadow­ing India's defence budget of $40 billion. China will raise its defense budget by around 10 per cent this year, compared with last year's 12.2 per cent, Fu Ying, Spokespers­on of China's legislatur­e -- National People's Congress (NPC), told a media briefing ahead of its annual session starting tomorrow. The exact figure will be published in a budget report tomorrow, she said.

China's defence budget rose by 12.2 percent last year to about $132 billion riding on a multi-year run of double- digit increases. A growth rate of about 10 per cent could be the lowest in five years, state-run Xinhua news agency reported.

However, it would also be the fifth year in a row of double-digit increases, despite slowing economic growth that fell to 7.4 per cent last year and is expected to further decline in 2015. Analysts say China's defence spending has increased ten-fold over the past quarter of a century fired by double-digit growth every year and the acquisitio­n and the developmen­t of sophistica­ted weapons and missiles systems points to big-picture ambitions.

Fu said, as a big country, China needs an army that can safeguard its national security and people.

"To tell the truth, there is still a gap between China's armed forces (and foreign counterpar­ts) in terms of overall military equipment. We still need more time," Fu said adding that the capital support is needed for the modernisat­ion of China's national defence and its army.

"Lagging behind leaves one vulnerable to attacks. That is a lesson we have learned from history," she said. China's defence policy is defensive in nature, Fu stressed.

"Compared with major countries in the world, the road to China's defense modernisat­ion is indeed a difficult one," Fu said.

"We have to rely on ourselves for most of our military equipment and research. Sometimes we have to do these from the very beginning," she said.

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