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Published 27 October 2022
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This publication is available at https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/international-defence-expenditure-2022/finance-and-economics-annual-statistical-bulletin-international-defence-2022
The Finance & Economics Statistical Bulletin series provides figures on the composition and scope of the Department’s expenditure, information on the impact of defence spending on the wider economy, and compares Ministry of Defence (MOD) spending to that of other departments and countries.
International Defence presents comparative information on UK defence spending and that of other countries. This includes the defence expenditure of NATO member states in constant US$ and as a percentage of their GDP and how much of their defence expenditure is spent on equipment. A comparison of two international defence spending data sources, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) and the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), is provided, focusing on top spenders. Trends for the UK, Germany, France and the USA are given particular focus at the end of the bulletin.
Responsible Statistician: Defence Expenditure Analysis Head of Branch
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This bulletin provides information on defence spending by NATO member states, top military spenders globally, as well as trends in defence spending and strategic posture for the UK, USA, France and Germany. It is produced as part of the transparency and accountability of the Ministry of Defence to Parliament and the public. Detailed statistics and historic time series can be found in the supporting data tables.
The information in this bulletin has a wide range of users including the media, politicians, academic researchers and the general public who use the information to:
This bulletin is not an Official Statistics publication
The United Kingdom Statistics Authority can designate statistics as National Statistics, in accordance with the Statistics and Registration Service Act 2007 and signifying compliance with the Code of Practice for Official Statistics.
Designation can be broadly interpreted to mean that the statistics:
However, as the statistics contained within this bulletin have already been published by either NATO, SIPRI or IISS, they are not being published as Official Statistics.
Further information about the limitations of International Defence data can be found in the Methodology section, and the sources of the information contained within the bulletin can be found referenced within the tables and in the footnotes.
USA outspends the rest of NATO by more than double for the tenth year running.
The USA maintains its position as the largest defence spender in NATO, with expenditure of $794 billion, representing 3.5% of their GDP in 2021. The USA spent more than twice as much on defence in 2021 than the rest of NATO combined, and there was an increase in USA spending of roughly 1% between 2020 and 2021. The UK remains the second highest spender in NATO in 2021, spending $71.9 billion on defence.
Figure 1: NATO countries defence expenditure (current 2021 prices and exchange rate (US$)), 2021[footnote 1]
Total NATO spending is the largest it has been in the past eight years.
Between 2014 and 2021, total NATO spending has increased by around $212 billion. Despite steadily decreasing their defence expenditure at the start of this period, the USA increased their spending by more than $11 billion in 2021. This brought their total defence expenditure up to a level above $790 billion which has not been seen since 2011. NATO expenditure is heavily influenced by the USA who alone accounted for 69% of the total in 2021. NATO Europe and Canada has shown a continued increase in defence expenditure since 2014, with an increase of 3% between 2020 and 2021. During this period they increased their spending by $11 billion. The UK was the largest contributor to this, spending an additional $3.6 billion in 2021.
Figure 2: NATO defence expenditure 2014-2021 (2021 prices and exchange rate (US$))
UK, France and Germany are the three largest contributors to spending in NATO Europe and Canada.
The chart below shows how the defence spending of NATO Europe countries changed between 2014 and 2021, in the context of their overall 2021 expenditure. While some European countries showed significant percentage growth, they have generally been the countries with a low level of defence expenditure. To demonstrate this, the UK showed an average annual increase of 1.4% between 2014 and 2021 which translates to an extra $6 billion. Meanwhile, Lithuania’s 37% increase during the same period only represents around $1.1 billion.
This is why, despite some significant changes in spending patterns at a national level, the European total only increased slightly over this period.
Figure 3: Average % change in real defence spending of NATO Europe countries, 2014-2021
The UK, USA and Greece are the only countries to have met the NATO target every year for the past eight years.
NATO sets a guideline for its members to spend at least 2% of national GDP on defence annually. In 2021, the UK spent roughly the same percentage on defence as they did in 2020. They were also one of only seven NATO members to meet this guideline; the other countries being Greece, the USA, Poland, Latvia, Estonia and Croatia.
Greece are now first in the NATO rankings, spending 3.7% of GDP on defence. For the first time since 2014, Croatia has passed the 2% spending threshold.
Only one member state spent less than 1% of GDP on defence in 2021; this was Luxembourg. They consistently spend the lowest percentage of GDP on defence, averaging just under 0.5% from 2014 through to 2021.
Figure 4: NATO countries’ defence expenditure as a percentage of GDP (2015 prices), 2021[footnote 2]
Greece moves up to second following a national armed forces modernisation plan.
NATO sets a guideline that its members should spend at least 20% of their defence budget on equipment. In 2021, the UK was one of seventeen countries to meet this target, spending 26.1% of its defence expenditure on equipment.
Luxembourg topped the equipment expenditure rankings with 46.9%, however this is inflated due to their low total spend.
Greece’s proportion of defence expenditure on equipment expenditure increases from 12.1% in 2020 to 37.2% in 2021. This increase takes them from 25th to 2nd in NATO rankings, and was primarily driven by a national armed forces modernisation plan, which included upgrading to Rafale combat aircraft and frigates.
France, Turkey, the UK and the USA are the only countries to have consistently met the 20% target since 2014.
Figure 5: NATO countries’ equipment expenditure as a percentage of defence expenditure 2021[footnote 2]
Major defence sources continue to disagree on level of China’s spending.
Comparisons of international defence expenditure are challenging due to the varying definitions of defence expenditure employed by the different organisations which publish estimates. Some widely used estimates of global defence spending are produced by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) and the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS). However, estimates and global rankings differ even between these sources, as can be seen in Figure 6.
Figure 6: Estimates of total defence spending, ranked from highest to lowest by IISS spend, 2021 (US$)
China, whose armed forces remain the largest in the world, has significantly different estimates between the two sources. This is to be expected due to the absence of reliable, openly available figures for Chinese defence expenditure. There was a difference of $3.2 billion in UK spend between IISS and SIPRI, which is a consequential difference, as it affects whether the UK is considered the 3rd or 4th largest global spender on defence. In 2020, the UK was considered the 4th largest global defence spender according to IISS, and 5th largest defence spender according to SIPRI.
NATO continues to outspend Non-NATO members.
SIPRI provides global estimates of defence spending which are displayed as a proportion of total global spending below. Global military expenditure in 2021 was estimated by SIPRI to be $1,960 billion, an increase of $150 billion in nominal terms since 2020. Spending by NATO members made up 55% of all global military expenditure, which has decreased from the 56% of proportional spend in 2020.
Figure 7: Global military expenditure based on Market Exchange Rates (MER), 2021[footnote 3][footnote 4]
The USA remained the largest spender in 2021, accounting for more than the rest of the top 10 largest spenders combined and making up 38% of total global military expenditure. The UK remains second of the NATO members with an increased spend of $9.2 billion from 2020, with France and Germany beneath them in third and fourth respectively. This year, Saudi Arabia remain in fourth of the Non-NATO members, despite spending approximately $1.9 billion less than in 2020. India and Russia remain in second and third respectively. SIPRI has not published figures for the UAE since 2014, but based on the last recorded figure in 2014 they would have been in the top 20 highest spenders shown above.
The following charts present a range of defence comparators for the UK, USA, France and Germany since 1980. These nations have been selected on the basis that they either have similar strategic postures, capabilities or force structures to the UK, or that the relative size of their respective defence budgets are comparable. Definitions of defence expenditure have changed over time and differ between countries; this makes detailed comparisons between countries difficult. Considering this fact, data should only be used as an indication of trends and not as a definitive time series. From 2009 French defence expenditure excludes the Gendarmerie which is now financed separately by the Ministry of the Interior. This change more accurately reflects the NATO definition for defence expenditure, but has led to lower levels of defence spending, both in total and as a percentage of GDP.
UK and USA continue to consistently meet NATO’s 2006 spending target of 2% of GDP.
Defence spending as a percentage of GDP began decreasing for all four nations in the early to mid-1980s as the Cold War drew to a close. This decrease continued throughout the 1990s after the end of the Cold War, with a brief increase in the UK and USA as a result of the first Gulf War. This decrease ended in the early 2000s because of military activity in Iraq and Afghanistan.
While spending as a percentage of GDP has remained relatively stable since 2000 in the UK, Germany and France, USA defence spending as a percentage of GDP has been more variable. As a result of military activity in the Middle East, USA expenditure rose sharply to peak at over 5% of GDP in 2009 before then falling rapidly to 3.5% in 2021.
Figure 8: Defence spending as a % of GDP (current prices), 1980-2021[footnote 5]
At NATO’s 2006 Riga Summit it was agreed by NATO members that nations would spend at least 2% of GDP on defence expenditure. At the time, the UK, France and the USA were all spending above this threshold. However, since 2010 only the UK and the USA have consistently met this target. France fell below the 2% target in 2009 when French defence expenditure began to exclude spending on its Gendarmerie.
USA spending per person continues to fluctuate amid allies’ stability.
Spending per capita was relatively stable throughout the 1980s for each of the countries considered except the USA, whose spending increased during the first half of the decade, and then decreased during the latter. Spending per capita for all countries decreased during the 1990s, except for a brief USA and UK upturn as a result of the first Gulf War.
Figure 9: Real Defence spending per capita (constant 2021 prices), 1980-2021
Military personnel number relative to population remains constant for last five years despite overall decrease since 1980.
All four countries have seen a gradual decrease in the number of military personnel as a proportion of the total population since 1980. For all countries apart from Germany, these numbers were highest in the early 1980s. German estimates peaked in 1990, coinciding with reunification following the end of the Cold War, before undergoing a rapid decrease because of restrictions on the size of Germany’s military, a condition of reunification[footnote 6].
Figure 9 showed that USA expenditure per person increased substantially between 1999 and 2009. However, the actual number of military personnel per thousand population in Figure 10 shows a decrease over the same period. This would indicate that this additional finance was more likely spent on resources rather than on personnel.
Figure 10: Number of military personnel per thousand population, 1980-2021[footnote 5]
As mentioned earlier, France updated its definition of defence expenditure in 2009 to exclude that on the Gendarmerie. The result was a dramatic decrease in French personnel per thousand population that year. Germany saw a similar, though much smaller, decrease after 2010 due to the abolition of conscription. The UK witnessed a fall in the number of military personnel per thousand population in 2014. One year later the UK’s Ministry of Defence launched the Strategic Defence and Security Review (SDSR) 2015 which outlines how the UK intends to continue recruiting and retaining their armed forces personnel.
Spending per service person stabilises as allies maintain similar personnel numbers.
Military expenditure per Service person was relatively consistent from 1980 to 2000 for all four nations (the USA and UK only undergoing very gradual increases). Since 2000 all four countries have increased their spending per Service person. This increase has been relatively gradual in Germany and France; spurred on by the end of conscription in the former and the reclassification of the Gendarmerie in the latter.
The UK has increased spending per service person by more than $135,000 between 2012 and 2021. However, this is largely due to a decrease of 35,000 military personnel in the same period. This is a similar explanation for France and Germany’s increase during these years.
Figure 11: Real defence spending per service person, 1980-2021
Expenditure per service person in the USA ceased its considerable rise in 2009 after peaking at $639,000 per person. From 2010 to 2016 its military personnel reduced by 126,000, and over the same period US expenditure fell by a total of $145 billion. The drop in expenditure greatly outweighed the falling personnel numbers causing the decrease shown in Figure 11. Since 2017, the reverse is true whereby military personnel has increased by 2.5% relative to a 14% increase in total defence expenditure.
This short section on methodology sets out some simple processes and methods used in the compilation of some of the tables and charts used in this bulletin. More detailed explanations of the data sources and methodologies used can be found in the related data tables and Background Quality Reports.
International Defence Statistics are available in a variety of publications and on a substantial number of websites. The UK Ministry of Defence has no control over the quality, reliability and coverage of data contained within these sources and does not endorse any specific output.
Data provided in this publication fall outside the scope of National Statistics and Official Statistics and as such, must be regarded as illustrative only.
Making international comparisons of defence presents a number of widely documented issues relating to the comparability and granularity of the international source data. Making direct comparisons will never be straightforward because:
While these problems are less significant in relation to the comparison of defence spending between NATO members, they are substantial in relation to global comparisons.
NATO publishes an annual compendium of financial, personnel and economic data for all member countries. The NATO definition of defence expenditure differs from national definitions so the figures quoted may diverge considerably from those presented in national budgets. More information relating to the revised NATO definition can be found on the NATO website.
The estimates presented in Figure 2 are based on constant 2021 prices and, as far as possible, constant 2021 exchange rates.
The deflators used to convert current price totals into 2021 constant figures were inferred from the NATO release using the current price estimates and the constant 2015 price estimates. Exchange rates are inferred from US$ and local currency totals reported in the NATO press release.
The estimates presented in Figure 2 are the sums of the national totals calculated as above.
Constant Prices (Real Values) are price values expressed in the currency value of a particular period (usually a single year). Typically used when comparing spending across a time series, in order to ensure that any changes are due to actual changes in expenditure, rather than factors such as shifts in currency value/inflation.
Current Prices (Outturn Prices) are the prices of the period when the expenditure actually occurred.
Gendarmerie (National) is one of the two national police forces of France along with the National Police. It is a branch of the French Armed Forces placed under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of the Interior with additional duties to the Ministry of Defence.
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) (at market prices) is the value of goods and services produced within a country’s borders in a year. Economic data are often quoted as a percentage of GDP to give an indication of trends through time and to make international comparisons easier.
Gross Domestic Product Deflator is an implicit price deflator for the Gross Domestic Product and is derived by dividing the estimate of GDP at current prices by the estimate of GDP at constant prices. The GDP Deflator is commonly used as a measure of inflation in the economy for the country to which it refers.
IISS stands for the International Institute for Strategic Studies, which is a global think tank that researches political and military conflict.
Market Exchange Rate (MER) is a currency exchange rate determined largely by market forces.
Ministry of Defence (MOD) is the United Kingdom Government Department responsible for implementation of Government defence policy and is the headquarters of the British Armed Forces. The principal objective of the MOD is to defend the United Kingdom and its interests. The MOD also manages day to day running of the armed forces, contingency planning and defence procurement.
NATO stands for North Atlantic Treaty Organisation. An alliance whose purpose is to guarantee the freedom and security of its members through political and military means.
Nominal Terms is a year on year comparison of current prices, not adjusted for the effects of inflation.
Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) is a method of measuring the relative purchasing power of different countries’ currencies over the same types of goods and services. Because goods and services may cost more in one country than in another, PPP allows us to make more accurate comparisons of standards of living across countries. The estimates use price comparisons of comparable items but since not all items can be matched exactly across countries and time, the estimates are not always “robust.”
SIPRI stands for the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, which is an international institute that researches conflict, armaments, arms control and disarmament.
Where rounding has been used, totals and sub-totals have been rounded separately and so may not equal the sums of their rounded parts.
Corrections to the published statistics will be made if errors are found, or if figures change as a result of improvements to methodology or changes to definitions. When making corrections, we will follow the Ministry of Defence Statistics Revisions and Corrections Policy. All corrected figures will be identified by the symbol “r”, and an explanation will be given of the reason for and size of the revision. Corrections which would have a significant impact on the utility of the statistics will be corrected as soon as possible, by reissuing the publication. Minor errors will also be corrected, but for convenience these corrections may be timed to coincide with the next annual release of the publication.
Defence Statistics welcomes feedback on our statistical products. If you have any comments or questions about this publication or about our statistics in general, you can contact us as follows:
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Figures for 2021 are provided as estimates. ↩
Iceland is a member of the Alliance but has no armed forces. ↩ ↩2
The figures on this page have been calculated using SIPRI definitions of defence expenditure and therefore may differ from information based on the NATO or IISS definition. ↩
The top 20 global defence spenders are charted individually; all other countries’ expenditure is represented in the ‘other’ groupings. ↩
Historic figures in this chart differ from those shown in the 2021 bulletin due to exchange rate variations and updates to NATO expenditure figures that have since occurred. ↩ ↩2
The Treaty on the Final Settlement with Respect to Germany. Relevant section is Article 3, paragraph 2. ↩
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