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US Defense Budget Not That Much Bigger Than China, Russia: Gen. Milley - Breaking Defense

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"I've seen comparative numbers of US defense budget versus China, US defense budget versus Russia," Gen. Milley said. "What is not often commented on is the cost of labor. We’re the best paid military in the world by a long shot. The cost of Russian soldiers or Chinese soldiers is a tiny fraction."
By SYDNEY J. FREEDBERG JR.on May 22, 2018 at 4:00 AM

WASHINGTON: It’s become a commonplace to say the US spends much more on defense than any other country — but what if that’s not exactly true? Inspired by something Army Chief of Staff Mark Milley said to the Senate, I pulled together some numbers that suggest America’s superior spending power erodes dramatically when you compare actual purchasing power. Once you factor in how much the US military spends on pay and benefits for uniformed and civilian personnel — almost half the budget by some measures — as opposed to weapons, operations, and training, then China’s defense budget may actually be bigger.

We aren’t econometricians here at Breaking Defense, so our methodology is admittedly very rough. What we are good at is listening to Pentagon and Hill leaders very carefully, and I was struck by an exchange last week at a hearing of the Senate appropriations subcommittee on defense.

“I’m going to ask you all a town hall question; it’s the kind of thing you might run into in any town in America,” said Sen. Dick Durbin, the subcommittee’s ranking Democrat. “You tell us that one of our biggest threats, greatest enemies, is Russia; turns out we read recently that Russia spends about $80 billion a year on its military…..So let me get this straight: We’re spending $600, $700 billion against an enemy that’s spending $80 billion. Why is this even a contest?”

The traditional answer is that the US has global commitments — multiple allies to defend, myriad adversaries to deter — and therefore it’s not fair to compare our budget to any one country’s. But General Milley instead took issue with the math:

“I’ve seen comparative numbers of US defense budget versus China, US defense budget versus Russia or any other number of countries,” Milley said. “What is not often commented on is the cost of labor.”

“We’re the best paid military in the world by a long shot,” he continued. “The cost of Russian soldiers or Chinese soldiers is a tiny fraction. So we would have to normalize the data in order to compare apples to apples and oranges to oranges…. take out the MILPERS (military personnel) accounts for both the Chinese, Russians, and/or the US, and then compare the investment costs.”

“I think you’ll find that Chinese and Russian investments, modernization, new weapons systems, etc., their R&D — which is all government-owned and also is much cheaper — I think you’d find a much closer comparison, Senator,” Milley concluded.

Now, estimating what China and Russia actually spend on defense is complex enough, let alone separating out their pay and benefits costs. Russian military pensions, for example, were paid from the defense budget until the mid-1990s, then taken out. So we can’t do the entire exercise Milley recommends. But we can do two crucial parts of it.

First, the standard comparisons of international defense spending — like the graph above — convert everything to US dollars at market rates. That’s fine if you’re comparing countries’ power to buy military equipment with hard currency on the global market.

But countries like Russia and China buy most of their equipment from domestic suppliers, which they can pay in local currency. As Milley points out, most of these domestic defense firms are also either officially government-owned or heavily government-influenced, and their products are generally much cheaper than their US equivalents.

So instead of using market rates, a better measure (albeit still imperfect) would be Purchasing Power Parity (PPP), which tries to account for prices being different in different countries. That gets you this chart:
US-China-Russia-PPP.jpg

SOURCE: DoD 2019 budget submission, SIPRI database

Now for the second part of Milley’s proposed comparison: Set aside the roughly 42 percent of the US defense budget that goes to pay and benefits. We can’t set aside the comparable portions of the Russian and Chinese budgets, because we don’t have good estimates of what they spend on personnel, but since personnel is a relatively small share of their budgets, we can still make a decent first approximation:
US-China-Russia-PPP-with-US-less-personnel.jpg

SOURCE: DoD 2019 budget submission, SIPRI database

Now the US doesn’t look so dominant anymore. In fact, the Chinese budget looks bigger: The unanswered question is how much of that we should take away to account for their personnel costs.

Whatever methodology you use, Russian spending remains a fraction of US — although that fraction rises sharply, from just 11 percent at market exchange rates, to 26 percent at purchasing power parity, to 44 percent of US spending excluding pay and benefits. But Chinese spending rises from 38 percent of US (market rates) to 71 percent (PPP) to 122 percent (excluding US pay & benefits spending).

Now, this is comparing the entire Chinese budget to part of the US budget, so the actual China:US ratio is lower that this graph shows. How much lower depends on how much of the Chinese budget goes for personnel. But if it’s anything less than 18 percent of their budget, about $78.5 billion — the difference between their total budget (PPP adjusted) and ours less personnel — then they’re still spending more than we are, adjusted for purchasing power, on weapons, training, operations, and so on.

The obvious counterargument is that you generally get what you pay for. US military leaders routinely extoll the quality of American personnel — their skill, dedication, and initiative — as our decisive advantage, more important than even our advanced technology. So perhaps our high spending on personnel is central to our military performance. But perhaps regimes that treat their people less generously can still get the human performance they need and have a lot more left over for new weapons.

Source:https://breakingdefense.com/2018/05...hat-much-bigger-than-china-russia-gen-milley/
 
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But countries like Russia and China buy most of their equipment from domestic suppliers, which they can pay in local currency. As Milley points out, most of these domestic defense firms are also either officially government-owned or heavily government-influenced, and their products are generally much cheaper than their US equivalents.

The author of this article must came here to read my assessment regarding the defense budge between China and US, I had mentioned several occasion that China's 150 billions is more less equivalent to US 700 billions defense budge: Unlike India which virtually import everything, facing military embargo China had to build everything from bolts and nuts, taking a ship welder as example, Chinese labor cost 7x less than American labor to perform the same type of job. Just for military salary and defense contractors salary, we're seven time less than US counterpart, of course in term of technological sophistication US is still ahead of China but in term of defense budge, we're more less equal to US if we take value engineering (function/cost) into consideration. And which explain why China can afford to build 055, aircraft carriers, DF missiles series, J-20 in parallel...all these are from domestic suppliers in exception of Su-35 and Al-31 engines.

The only remaining US advantage over China is that their military export is still far exceed China hence their can use the export to amortize their defense procurements but if China use the same % of GDP on defense as US, we then can then afford to have an arm race with US and catch up US in short future.
 
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Correct. As i have said so many times, PPP can only be used to compare standard of living between coutries with similar level of development, like between India and Bsngladesh, not between countries too different like India and China.

India can not use PPP to pay for hi speed ralways, mobiphone and other industrial equipment they need to import, or to pay for foreign specialists, while China virtually can manufacture by itself everything the US can (real manufacturing, not assembly and give a domestic name and call it indigenous production like India).
 
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Correct. As i have said so many times, PPP can only be used to compare standard of living between coutries with similar level of development, like between India and Bsngladesh, not between countries too different like India and China.

India can not use PPP to pay for hi speed ralways, mobiphone and other industrial equipment they need to import, or to pay for foreign specialists, while China virtually can manufacture by itself everything the US can (real manufacturing, not assembly and give a domestic name and call it indigenous production like India).

It's even worst for India, all their defense procurement are from Foreign nations, their 46 billions defense budgets is less than 25 billions value if we take US as benchmark, they will have to pay foreign labor salary which 10x of Indian labors to build C-17, Apache, Su-30mki...plus these foreign nations such Russia, US, France and Israel all make big chunk of profit out of India: take C-17 as example, India paid 3x to 4x of what US airforce would pay, so their value engineering is drastically reduced, take the same ship welder as example: Function/ cost

to perform the same welding function, India will have to pay 10x of Foreign labor + profit when they buy ship from let say US or France.
 
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