World Politics: International Politics on the World Stage, Brief, 4/e
John T. Rourke,
University of Connecticut - Storrs Mark A. Boyer,
University of Connecticut - Storrs
Pursuing Security
Military Expenditures as a Percentage of GDP
Many countries devote a significant proportion of their total central governmental
expenditures to defense: weapons, personnel, and research and development of military hardware. A glance at the map reveals that there are a number of regions in which
defense expenditures are particularly high, reflecting the degree of past and present
political tension between countries. The clearest example is the Middle East.
The steady
increase in military expenditures by developing countries is one of the most alarming
(and least well known) worldwide defense issues. Where the end of the cold war has
meant a substantial reduction of military expenditures for the countries in North America and Europe and for Russia, in many of the world's developing countries, military
expenditures have risen between 15 percent and 20 percent per year for the past few
years, averaging out to 7. 5 percent per year for the past quarter century. Even though
many developing countries still spend less than 5 percent of their gross national product on defense, these funds could be put to different uses in such human development
areas as housing, land reform, health care, and education.