March 4 (Bloomberg) -- China plans to boost defense spending by 7.5 percent, the slowest pace of expansion in a decade, as the government seeks to allay concerns about the country’s growing military might.
The increase to 532.1 billion yuan ($78 billion) compares with a 14.9 percent rise in 2009. China’s defense budget had been expanding by at least 10 percent a year for the past 10 years.
“The Chinese government has always paid attention to controlling the size of our defense spending,” National People’s Congress spokesman Li Zhaoxing, a former foreign minister, told reporters in Beijing today. “China is committed to a policy of peaceful development.”
China’s military spending is second only to the U.S., which aims to spend $636.3 billion this year, and is more than double India’s budget of $32.1 billion.
“While this year’s increase is down a bit, we are still talking about an increase that is much bigger than Western nations and one that allows for a significant military build-up to continue,” Andrew Davies, director of Operation and Capability at Canberra-based Australian Strategic Policy Institute, said in a telephone interview.
The country’s sustained military buildup comes as other governments in the region have either cut or held expenditure steady, raising concerns that a power imbalance was building. China has territorial disputes with neighbors including Japan, India and Vietnam, and regards Taiwan as a renegade province that will be reunited by force if necessary.
Relative Growth
“Their capability is increasing relative to others, and countries in the region are worried about that,” Phillip C. Saunders, a distinguished research fellow at the National Defense University’s Institute for National Strategic Studies in Washington, said by telephone. “A lot of people think China wants to be a dominant military power in the region.”
China’s military is starting to have a presence far from its shores. Last year Chinese navy ships protected sea lanes from Somali pirates in the Middle East.
“This was unprecedented strategically,” David Finkelstein, the director of China Studies at the Center for Naval Analyses in Alexandria, Virginia, said in a telephone interview. “This is the first time Chinese navy vessels operated outside of Asia.”
The country is also considering sending combat troops abroad for United Nations peacekeeping efforts, retired Chinese Navy Rear Admiral Yin Zhuo told reporters on March 3.
Taiwan Tension
China’s defense budget comes amid tensions with the U.S. over its plans to sell $6.4 billion of missiles, helicopters and ships to Taiwan. After the sale was announced in January, China said it was suspending military-to-military contacts and would sanction U.S. companies whose weapons were sold to Taiwan.
Saunders said this year’s actual spending could be as much as two and a half times the official budget, which does not include items including purchases of foreign weapon systems and pensions.
The U.S. says that China’s actual military spending may be more than twice the published budgets because it omits many items. In 2008 actual spending may have exceeded $140 billion compared with the stated budget of $58.8 billion, according to the Pentagon’s annual report to Congress on China’s Military Power, published last March.
“Although academic experts and outside analysts may disagree about the exact amount of military expenditure in China, almost all arrive at the same conclusion: Beijing significantly under-reports its military expenditures,” the Pentagon said in the report.
Economic Expansion
Chinese defense experts say the rise in spending is only natural given the country’s expanding economy and isn’t meant to threaten its neighbors.
“China does not seek to be a military superpower,” Yin said. China only wants a military “commensurate with our national interests and strength.”
That strength includes development of a new generation of long-range nuclear Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles capable of reaching the U.S., Saunders said.
The next big development for military watchers is whether China will build its own aircraft carrier, he said.
--Michael Forsythe. Frederik Balfour. With reporting by Chua Kong Ho in Beijing. Editors: Ben Richardson.
— emil
I think that with a bit of refinement, especially in relation to the design of incentives, Warren Buffet’s idea might be just what the industry needs. It would force bankers to do some critical thinking about the merits and demerits of a potential deal rather than justifying the highest possible valuation.
— Ayitey Parkes
Buffet sensibly formalizes this maxim by bringing competing views to the table.
Lincoln applied the same thought in politics (“Team of Rivals”), and Buffett extends it to commerce.
Why are we not surprised?
Thomas Kowall, PhD
Professor Emeritus, Strategy and Communication
International MBA Program
ENPC, Paris
— Thomas Kowall
In any event, your column brings to mind one of my few opportunities as a lawyer in a relatively small town for close contact with Wall Street investment bankers.
In the ’80s, I was engaged to represent a small NYSE-listed company with strong need of both cash and management expertise. Ideally, it would receive an equity investment from a company in the same industry that could also augment the management capabilities of the client. While a viable prospect (Company A) was soon identified, the board knew it should solicit competing offers to gain needed perspective. A big name Wall Street banking firm was engaged. The banker would get a typical percentage fee if a deal were concluded with the prospects produced by it plus a fixed fee for a fairness opinion. For obvious reasons, the banker had to bring in someone other than Company A to get its percentage fee. A number of unpromising prospects were brought in by the banker. It was finally concluded that my client would go forward with Company A.
As the parties converged the night before negotiations with Company A, the bankers took me aside and said they had concluded that, based on the outstanding offer from Company A (terms they had known all along), they would be unable to deliver the highly-important fairness opinion unless they were engaged to conduct the negotiations with Company A. This would have entitled the banker to a transaction fee of several hundred thousand dollars. I, being inexperienced in dealings with big-time bankers, was shocked to learn that our banker could, after all, behave like a nefarious real estate broker might back home. The bankers did, however, dress a good deal better. After huddling with my clients, I advised the bankers we could not accede to their request and the bankers said they would therefore return to New York that night.
At the negotiations the following day, a deal was reached with Company A, along the lines of its original offer. But we needed the fairness opinion. I called our banker in New York, related the terms of the deal we had negotiated and asked if it would provide the fairness opinion. I can’t say I was surprised to learn the banker would provide it.
A few weeks later, it having been determined by all parties that my client needed substantially more capital than had originally been anticipated, a second agreement with Company A was reached at a per share price that was more favorable than that in the original transaction. I called the investment banker and asked if a fairness opinion for that transaction could also be given (for the same fee as for the first one). No problem.
— Chuck Wellborn
— bill kennedy
— J Atkins
didn’t he sell his soul to bankers to help fund the Burlington Santa-Fe and countless other “deals”
— Joe
— mbi