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Is China avoiding arms race with US by setting ‘low-key’ defence budget?

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Senior officials in the People's Liberation Army walk to the Great Hall of the People during this month’s National People’s Congress. Photo: Kyodo

A 7 per cent defence budget increase rate for the world’s biggest army was carefully decided and aimed at keeping China from becoming tangled in an arms race with the United States, Chinese military experts say.

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However, overseas military analysts said Beijing’s apparent attempt to downplay the sensitivity of the nation’s defence budget figure would stimulate more speculation over its accuracy and the People’s Liberation Army’s strategic development.

Beijing-based naval expert Li Jie said the 7 per cent increase, which is the smallest annual increase since 2000, showed that “Beijing wants to clarify a long-standing misunderstanding” at home and overseas that the PLA is in an arms race with the US.

“China’s defence budget was decided by its comprehensive national strength, including the country’s strategic needs and domestic economic development,” he said. “It’s a norm that will not be changed, no matter how much the US increases its military spending.”

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He said that downplaying the figure also aims at differentiating China’s strategies from those of the US, which are used to protect its national interests by intervening in global and regional security.

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