March 27, 2010

Rising Dragon, Slumbering Elephant*

World Politics Review, March 26, 2010
Laxman Kumar Behera
Recently, both China and India increased their official defense budgets for fiscal year 2010, to $78 billion and $32 billion, respectively (although according to Western observers, China's actual military spending is up to three times the official figures). In doing so, Beijing raised its defense allocation by 7.5 percent, and New Delhi by just under 4 percent. Besides the differences in absolute budget and percentage growth, the two countries also demonstrate contrasting approaches to achieving their overall military objectives. For China, defense spending is a means toward achieving long-term power ambitions and military supremacy, while India is caught in an exercise of resource allocation, devoid of long-term goals. The result, visible in the two countries' military capabilities, is distinctly favorable to China.



*:The article was first published in World Politics Review on March 26, 2010. To read the complete article click on http://www.worldpoliticsreview.com/article.aspx?id=5338 (freely availabel till April 03, 2010).

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