
![]() |
| Helicopters attend a parade in Beijing, capital of China, Sept. 3, 2015. China on Thursday held commemoration activities, including a grand military parade, to mark the 70th anniversary of the victory of the Chinese People's War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression and the World Anti-Fascist War. (Xinhua/Liu Junxi) |
BEIJING, March 5 -- China on Saturday announced the country's lowest defense budget increase in six years in the wake of rising economic headwinds and last year's massive drawdown of service people.
According to a budget report to the national legislature annual session, the government plans to raise the 2016 defense budget by 7.6 percent to 954 billion yuan (about 146 billion U.S. dollars).
The increase last year was 10.1 percent.
The fresh raise will make the world's second largest economy the second largest defense spender, both next to the United States which, in the exact words of U.S. President Barack Obama, spends more on military "than the next eight nations combined."
Obama proposed a 534-billion dollar defense budget package for the 2016 fiscal year, about 3.6 times China's budget this year. This year's new increase will do little to close that gap.
It would, however, break a multi-year run of double-digit increases in China's defense budget, and mark the slowest growth in six years.
China has world's largest high-speed rail network
Top beauties in Chinese provinces
600 people attend Lusheng playing contest in S China
Engineer troop builds bridge in real combat conditions
You can urinate in public in Chongqing
Rice terrace scenery in southwest China's Yunnan
2016 Miss Chinatown USA pageant held in San Francisco
Ancient pagodas across China
Wedding dress show up in the air
Top 20 hottest women in the world in 2014
Top 10 hardest languages to learn
10 Chinese female stars with most beautiful faces
China’s Top 10 Unique Bridges, Highways and Roads
Harris is making waves in S.China Sea
With new plant, Airbus seeks to secure China market share
Chinese sound off on America’s loudest presidential hopeful
40 years after Cultural Revolution, repentance of Red Guards is still rareDay|Week