NATO Members Drive Fastest Increase in Global Defense Spending for a Decade
December 18, 2018 | IHS MarkitEstimated reading time: 4 minutes
Global defense expenditure grew 4.9% in 2018, the fastest growth rate since 2008, according to the annual Jane’s Defense Budget report, released today by business information provider IHS Markit.
Global defense spending grew for the fifth consecutive year to reach a total of $1.78 trillion in 2018, significantly exceeding the post-Cold War record of $1.69 trillion in 2010, according to the report. Fueling this increase was a 5.8%, $54 billion boost to NATO spending largely due to higher defense spending in the US.
Jane’s by IHS Markit forecasts that overall NATO defense expenditure will exceed $1 trillion in 2019.
“Following a challenging period for NATO members in the wake of the global financial crisis, countries have begun to increase defense spending again, in response to emerging threats,” said Fenella McGerty, principal analyst at Jane’s. “This has slowed the rebalance in defense expenditure toward emerging markets.”
Jane’s projects that global defense spending growth will moderate to a level of around 2% per year over the next five years as budget increases in Europe and North America slow and emerging markets again become the key source of growth.
“In 2018, we’ve seen a reversal of recent trends with Western states driving growth,” said Craig Caffrey, principal analyst at Jane’s. “Going forward we still see Asia and the Middle East as the key sources of sustainable increases in defense spending.”
NATO Members Increase Spending
In 2010, NATO member spending accounted for two thirds of global defense expenditure. As emerging markets expanded and developed economies implemented cuts over the decade, the balance of global defense expenditure shifted dramatically. The NATO share of expenditure steadily declined to just 55% in 2017 with non-NATO spending on track to surpass NATO expenditure by the early-2020s.
“As 24 of the 29 NATO members increased their defense budget in 2018, the decline in the NATO share of global spending has stalled,” McGerty said. “The recommitment to defense in Western states means the global balance of expenditure between NATO and non-NATO markets is now more likely to shift from the mid-2020s.”
Nine NATO members will reach the 2% of GDP benchmark for defense expenditure in 2019—compared to just four members in 2014. These countries are the US, Greece, Estonia, Lithuania, United Kingdom, Poland, France, Latvia and Romania.
US Continues to Invest in Modernization
US defense spending increased by $46 billion in 2018 to reach $702.5 billion as the Pentagon sought to improve military readiness and bolster missile defense capabilities. The 7% boost to the Pentagon’s budget represents the largest increase in US defense spending since 2008.
“Modernisation accounts will reach $244.1 billion in fiscal year (FY) 2019—the highest level of investment funding since the period FY2007-2010, which experienced the maximum Overseas Contingency Operations and maximum US Department of Defense (US DoD) spending levels,” said Guy Eastman, senior analyst at Jane’s. “The funding levels for FY2018 and FY2019 have enabled the US DoD to start on the road to improved readiness and acquire improved warfighting capabilities.”
Eastern European Budgets Continue to Expand, While Germany’s 11% Spending Boost Will Bolster Western Europe’s Total
Six of the ten fastest growing defense budgets in the world in 2018 were situated in Eastern Europe. Defense spending in the region grew almost 9% in 2018 with Poland, Romania and the Ukraine driving increases. Notably, spending on military equipment has more than doubled in the region since the annexation of Crimea in 2014.
Western European defense spending increased for the third consecutive year in 2018 to reach $248 billion—2.4% higher than 2017. In 2019, regional spending should exceed pre-financial crisis levels as growth accelerates to 3.6% driven by a major 11% increase in the German defense budget.
“As fiscal balances have improved, countries are able to respond to a markedly poorer security environment and address the capability gaps that have emerged,” McGerty said. “European defense cooperation is also a driving factor as countries look to bolster domestic capabilities but also partner on new technologies, all of which requires greater investment.”
While the outlook for defense spending growth in Europe appears on an upward trend, this hinges on a stable UK defense budget and therefore upon the outcome of Brexit negotiations and the impact on the UK economy.
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