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China hike it’s defence budget to $275 Billion

On Thursday, March 5, 2026, during the opening session of the National People’s Congress (NPC) in Beijing, China officially announced a 7% hike in its defense budget, bringing the total to roughly 1.91 trillion yuan (approximately $275–$277 billion).

This marks the 11th consecutive year of single-digit growth and reflects a slight deceleration from the 7.2% increases seen in 2023, 2024, and 2025.


Key Budget Highlights

The 2026 defense budget is framed as “moderate and stable” by Chinese state media, though it remains the world’s second-largest military spend.

Metric2026 TargetChange from 2025
Total Amount1.91 Trillion Yuan ($275B – $277B)+7% Year-on-Year
Growth Rate7%Down from 7.2%
GDP Target4.5% – 5%Slashed (first time below 5% in 3 years)
Share of GDP< 1.5% (Official)Consistent with the last decade

Strategic Context: The “External Pressure”

Premier Li Qiang presented the budget in a work report that acknowledged a “worsening global crisis” and “rising geopolitical risks.”

  • Modernization Goals: The funding is aimed at the PLA’s 2027 Centenary Goals, focusing on advanced combat capabilities, cyberwarfare, and the “rapid upgrading” of weaponry to catch up with U.S. technology.
  • The “Taiwan & South China Sea” Factor: Analysts noted that the budget supports intensified training, drills around Taiwan, and efforts to “fully restore” jurisdiction over disputed areas like the Spratly Islands.
  • Global Conflict Impact: The budget comes amid the ongoing U.S.-Iran conflict and a trade war with the Trump administration, which have reportedly pressured China to lower its broader economic growth targets to prioritize security.

International Reactions

  • The “Transparency” Critique: Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara expressed concern over the “extensive and rapid increase” in Chinese military capabilities without sufficient transparency regarding the actual use of funds.
  • The US-China Gap: Despite the hike, China’s official budget remains roughly 3.5x smaller than the U.S. defense budget, which exceeded $1 trillion for fiscal year 2026.
  • Skepticism: Western analysts (including SIPRI and the U.S. DoD) suggest China’s actual military spending may be 30% to 60% higher than the announced figure when accounting for R&D and paramilitary costs.

Economic Slowdown

For the first time since 2023, China has lowered its annual GDP growth target to a range of 4.5% to 5%. The government cited the property market slump, high unemployment, and global instability as primary headwinds.

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