Global military spending hits a $2.7-trillion post-Cold War high. Photo / 123rf
Global military spending hits a $2.7-trillion post-Cold War high. Photo / 123rf
Worldwide military expenditure rose 9.4% in 2024, reaching $2.7 trillion, the highest since the Cold War.
Europe and the Middle East saw significant increases, with Russia’s spending up 38% and Israel’s 65%.
The US remained the largest spender at $997 billion, accounting for 37% of global military spending.
Worldwide military expenditure saw its steepest rise in 2024 since the end of the Cold War, reaching $2.7 trillion as wars and rising tensions drove up spending, researchers said on Monday.
Military spending rose worldwide with particularly large increases in Europe and the Middle East, according to a new report by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI).
Several European countries had seen “unprecedented” rises in their military spending, the report noted.
In real terms, spending rose 9.4% globally compared to 2023, with 2024 marking the 10th year of consecutive spending increases.
“This really speaks to the heightened geopolitical tensions,” Liang said. The spending increase was likely to have “a very profound socio-economic and political impact”, he added.
“Countries have to make trade-offs in their budgetary decisions,” he said.
“For example, we’ve seen many European countries cutting other spending like international aid to fund the increase in military spending, and ... trying to raise taxes or rely on loans or debt to fund the spending,” Liang said.
The main contributor to the rise in expenditure was the European region including Russia, where spending rose 17% to $693 billion.
All European countries, except Malta, expanded their budgets, “pushing European military spending beyond the level recorded at the end of the Cold War”, SIPRI said.
Russia’s military expenditure reached $149 billion in 2024: a 38% increase on the previous year and a doubling since 2015.
While that sum only corresponds to 43% of Russia’s arms spending, for Ukraine it is the equivalent of 34% of its GDP. That means it is carrying the highest military burden of any country.
The budget for Ukraine's defence and military is the number one financial burden on the country. Photo / Getty Images
Germany rearming
Germany’s spending increased 28%, reaching $88.5b, overtaking India as the fourth largest in the world.
“Germany became the biggest spender in Central and Western Europe for the first time since its reunification,” Liang noted.
The world’s largest spender, the United States, increased expenditure by 5.7%, reaching $997b. That alone accounts for 37% of worldwide spending and 66% of the military spending among Nato countries.
Total military spending by the 32 members of the US-led alliance rose to 1.5 trillion as all members increased their spending.
“We’ve seen in 2024 that 18 out of the 32 NATO countries reached the 2% GDP spending target, which is the highest since the founding of the alliance,” Liang said.
NATO countries have increased their military budget in the recent years. Photo / Getty Images
While some of the increases have been a result of European military aid to Ukraine, it has also been fuelled by concerns of potential US disengagement with the alliance.
“There has really been a shift in European defence policies, where we will see large-scale procurement plans into the arms industry in the years to come,” Liang explained.
Military budgets also drastically grew in the Middle East to an estimated $243b, an increase of 15% from 2023.
As Israel continued its offensive in Gaza, its military expenditure surged by 65% to $46.5b in 2024. SIPRI noted that this represented “the steepest annual increase since the Six-Day War in 1967”.
In contrast, Iran’s fell 10% to $7.9b in 2024, “despite its involvement in regional conflicts and its support for regional proxies”, the report added.
“The impact of sanctions on Iran severely limited its capacity to increase spending,” said SIPRI.
The world’s second-largest spender, China, increased its military budget by 7% to an estimated $314 billion, “marking three decades of consecutive growth”.
China, which has been investing in modernising its military and expansion of cyberwarfare capabilities and nuclear arsenal, accounted for half of all military spending in Asia and Oceania.