Asia’s Arms Bazaar: Growing Market For China
and US
Recent
data shows that Asia is now the world’s biggest arms market; moreover, the
region is increasingly demanding more sophisticated types of weapons. This is
good news for Chinese and US defence firms, who are the largest suppliers of
arms to Asia.
The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) recently
released its data on the global arms trade for 2017, and it is big news for
Asia as a whole, and for China and the United States in particular.
In the first place, SIPRI confirms that Asia (including the Indian
subcontinent and Oceania) has remained the world’s single largest arms market
for the past decade. According to the Institute, Asia accounted for a plurality
(42 percent) of all international arms transfers for the period 2013-2017,
easily outpacing the Middle East (the world’s other large arms market) at 32
percent. While its market share was down slightly from 2008-2012 (when it took
46 percent), Asian arms transfers were actually up during the more recent
period, as globally arms exports have increased.
Asian Arms Buys: Boosting the US
Some of the world’s largest arms buyers are in Asia. According to SIPRI,
during the period 2013-2017, five of the ten biggest arms importers were in the
region: India, China, Indonesia, Australia, and Pakistan. Vietnam, South Korea,
and Taiwan were among the top 15 largest arms importers. India, in fact, alone
accounted for 12 percent of all arms transfers during this period, maintaining
its position as the world’s largest arms buyer for the past several years (just
ahead of Saudi Arabia). Indian arms imports increased by 24 percent between the
periods 2008-2012 and 2013-2017.
All these arms purchases have been enabled by a continuing upward trend
in military spending in the region. According to SIPRI, defence expenditures in
Asia and Oceania in 2017 was up 3.6 percent over 2016 and 59 percent higher
than a decade earlier. So there is plenty of money available for new weaponry.
Two of the biggest beneficiaries of this rise in Asian arms imports are
the United States and China. According to SIPRI data, the US captured 34
percent of the global arms market for the period 2013-2017, easily beating
Russia, the world’s second largest arms exporter (which took only a 22 percent
share). US arms transfers in 2017 were the highest in nearly 20 years.
Moreover, US exports of arms grew by one-quarter between 2008-2012 and
2013-2017, further widening the gap between it and all other arms exporters.
Asia accounted for one-third of all US arms exports during the period
2013-2017. Its biggest customers in the region were Australia and Taiwan. While
Russia still leads the US in overall arms sales to Asia (accounting for 34
percent of all transfers to the region), the US has stolen business from
Russia’s traditional customers.
In India, for example, which accounted for 35 percent of all Russian
arms exports during 2013-2017, the US has become New Delhi’s second largest
weapons supplier. In fact, between 2008-2012 and 2013-2017, Indian arms
purchases from the US increased by 557 percent! Indonesia, which bought fighter
jets from Moscow, is also diversifying its arms suppliers, to the benefit of
Washington.
China: The New Big Supplier
China is also benefiting from the uptick in Asian arms transfers.
China’s exports of major arms grew by 38 percent between 2008-2012 and
2013-2017, and it captured 5.7 percent of the global arms market during the
latter period (although this was only good enough for fifth place, behind the
US, Russia, France, and Germany).
Most of Beijing’s biggest weapons buyers are in Asia, and during the
period 2013-2017, the region accounted for 72 percent of all Chinese arms
transfers. The two biggest buyers were Pakistan and Bangladesh, which together
bought over half of all Chinese arms exports. Pakistan, in fact, now buys
around 70 percent of its arms from China.
Beijing has chalked up some impressive overseas sales, including deals
to export eight Yuan-class submarines to Pakistan and three to Thailand.
China has also sold tanks to Myanmar and antiship cruise missiles to Indonesia,
as well as armed drones to Iraq, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates,
Nigeria, and Egypt.
At the same, China is starting to scale back its imports of arms, as its
domestic defence industries continue to improve and develop and produce
globally competitive military systems. This is particularly bad news, in the
long run, for Russia, which presently accounts for the bulk of all Chinese arms
purchases.
What Will the Next Five Years Hold?
Of course, sales are always about the future, not the past. For the
Asian arms market, however, the next five years will likely resemble the past
five. Regional tensions in the Indian subcontinent, in the South China Sea and
across the Taiwan Strait, and particularly in and around the Korean peninsula
will continue to drive increases in defence spending, which will in turn will
continue to impact regional arms acquisitions.
Asia, therefore, will continue to crave the newest and most advanced
armaments of all types. In particular, we should see steady purchases of modern
fighter jets, air defence systems, and navy ships. We should in particular see
an uptick in sales of weapons systems that were hitherto rarely found in Asian
militaries, such as advanced submarines and precision-guided air-to-ground
munitions.
These trends in arms purchases make Asia a continuing “must have” market
for the world’s leading – and aspiring – arms exporters. That in turn
will require that the world’s leading arms manufacturers – many of whom depend
heavily upon overseas sales for their survival – will have to continue to come
up with products that will meet the increasingly stringent demands of their
Asian customers.
*Richard A. Bitzinger is
a Visiting Senior Fellow with the Military Transformations Programme in the S.
Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological
University (NTU), Singapore.
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