The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Over ¥40 trillion sought for 5-year defense plan

- The Yomiuri Shimbun

Defense spending is planned to be set at more than ¥40 trillion in the next veyear defense program from scal 2023, according to sources.

The government and the ruling parties are coordinati­ng on the Medium Term Defense Program.

At the end of the ve-year term in scal 2027, the aim is to have this defense spending, plus related expenditur­es such as research and developmen­t on security, reach at least 2% of the nation’s gross domestic product. ough Japan is not a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on, this gure would put the nation on par with the NATO guidelines for its members.

The defense program speci es equipment and the total expenditur­es for the Self-Defense Forces during a ve-year period. e current program will be revised by the end of the year together with the National Security Strategy and the National Defense Program Guidelines.

The current Medium Term Defense Program set total defense spending at about ¥27.47 trillion. e government and the ruling parties intend to boost the figure signi cantly in order to drasticall­y strengthen the nation’s defense capabiliti­es.

Spending listed in the defense program does not include such defense-related costs as expenses for R&D by government entities other than the Defense Ministry and the developmen­t of infrastruc­ture. e government plans to establish a framework for allocating such security-related budgets and the Japan Coast Guard budget together as overall defense spending, with the aim of boosting this spending to account for at least 2% of GDP in scal 2027.

The nation’s initial defense budget for scal 2022 is 0.96% of GDP. With the current size of Japan’s economy, 2% would be about ¥11 trillion a year.

The Defense Ministry has proposed that the next program call for about ¥48 trillion in defense spending, while the Finance Ministry responded that about ¥35 trillion was considered reasonable. Defense Minister Yasukazu Hamada and

Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki are continuing to negotiate.

“It’s not acceptable to be below ¥40 trillion,” a former defense minister said.

The Finance Ministry has called for cutting the defense budget, saying many items are questionab­le in terms of their cost-e ectiveness. e ministry appears to have no choice, however, but to accept an increase in the budget amid a political showdown.

Some LDP members, mainly those who have in uence over security policy and defense budgets, have called for defense spending above the mid-¥40 trillion level.

The government and ruling parties hope to decide on a basic framework to set the amount by early December, according to the government and ruling coalition sources.

In light of this, the government has found it necessary to set defense spending at more than ¥40 trillion, partly to demonstrat­e both at home and abroad its determinat­ion to drasticall­y strengthen the nation’s defense capabiliti­es.

Japan’s defense budget was about ¥5.4 trillion for scal 2022, and is expected to top ¥6 trillion for the next scal year. e government intends to boost the amount every year through scal 2027.

Initially, the Defense Ministry had allocated ¥5 trillion to fund costs such as the purchase of stando missiles, which can be a powerful means of employing Japan’s counterstr­ike capability for self-defense to destroy enemy missile launch sites and other targets. Other major defense budget items included ¥2 trillion for security in space and ¥3 trillion for cybersecur­ity. (Nov. 28)

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