China’s military firms struggle as corruption purge bites

Revenues of China’s top military firms fell 10% last year. (EPA Images pic)
HONG KONG:

Revenues at China’s giant military firms fell last year as corruption purges slowed arms contracts and procurement, according to a study released today by a leading conflict think tank.

The Chinese declines contrast with strong revenue growth globally for big arms and military-services companies, fuelled by wars in Ukraine and Gaza, and global and regional tensions, the research by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute found.

“A host of corruption allegations in Chinese arms procurement led to major arms contracts being postponed or cancelled in 2024,” said Nan Tian, director of SIPRI’s military expenditure and arms production Programme.

“This deepens uncertainty around the status of China’s military modernisation efforts and when new capabilities will materialise,” Tian said.

China’s revenues down 10%, Japan’s up 40%

The People’s Liberation Army was one of the main targets of a broader corruption crackdown ordered by President Xi Jinping in 2012, reaching the upper levels of the military in 2023 when its Rocket Force was targeted.

Eight top generals were expelled from the ruling Communist Party on graft charges in October, including the country’s number two general, He Weidong.

He had served under Xi on the Central Military Commission, China’s supreme military command organisation.

Asian and Western diplomats say they are still trying to gauge the impact of the crackdown on China’s ongoing military rise and how far down it reaches through the command chain.

Revenues of China’s top military firms fell 10% last year, while those in Japan surged 40%, Germany 36% and US revenues rose 3.8%, SIPRI data shows.

Revenues of the world’s 100 largest arms firms rose 5.9% to a record US$679 billion, the report said, while China’s fall was enough to make Asia-Oceania the only region to post a revenue decline among its top arms firms.

China’s weapons revenue fell despite three decades of rising defence budgets in Beijing’s growing strategic rivalry with the US, Asia’s traditional military power, and tensions over Taiwan and the hotly disputed South China Sea.

Mid-, long-term investment, modernisation to continue

The buildup is bearing fruit as China deploys the world’s largest naval and coast guard fleets – including a potentially advanced new aircraft carrier – a host of new hypersonic missiles, nuclear weapons and air and sea drones.

Revenue fell at AVIC, China’s largest arms maker, land-systems producer Norinco and aerospace and missile manufacturer CASC, all state-owned, according to the SIPRI research.

Norinco experienced the steepest revenue decline, falling 31% to US$14 billion.

Corruption-related personnel changes at the top of Norinco and CASC sparked government reviews and project delays, while deliveries of AVIC’s military aircraft slowed, the research found.

The timeline of advanced systems for the People’s Liberation Army’s Rocket Force, which handles its growing arsenal of ballistic, hypersonic and cruise missiles, could be exposed, along with aerospace and cyber programmes, said SIPRI researcher Xiao Liang.

This adds to uncertainties over the PLA’s target of getting key capabilities and war-fighting readiness in place for its 100th anniversary, Liang said.

The PLA’s forerunner, Mao Zedong’s Red Army, was founded in 1927.

“However, in the medium and longer term, sustained investment in defence budgets and political commitment behind modernisation will continue, albeit with some programme delays, higher costs and tighter control of procurement,” Liang said.

Source link

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

Representational image.

China Revives Economic Coercion to Punish Japan

Sino-Japanese relations are in freefall again after comments by new Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi on Nov. 7 suggesting that Chinese use of force against Taiwan could lead to Japan deploying its Self Defense Forces. Beijing quickly retaliated by sending Chinese coast guard vessels into waters around disputed islands and military drones near an outlying

Chinese Manufacturing Is Slumping Despite Boost From Trade Truce

(Bloomberg) — China’s manufacturing activity contracted in November, according to official and private surveys, as stronger demand overseas after a trade truce with the US failed to reverse a deepening slowdown in the economy. Despite a surge in new export orders, the RatingDog China manufacturing purchasing managers’ index unexpectedly slumped to 49.9, according to a

loadingImg

Dubai Courts China’s Next Tech Champions

When a little-known Chinese startup rented the cheapest-tier booth at a venture conference in Dubai last October, few took notice. Three months later, the company’s valuation had surged into the billions. That startup was DeepSeek, and its sudden rise has become an example of how Dubai is positioning itself as a launchpad for China’s next

YouTube video

China launches classified Shijian-28 spacecraft, reusable Zhuque-3 rocket faces delay

HELSINKI — China launched the latest in a series of experimental, often opaque satellites Sunday, while the debut flight of the commercial Zhuque-3 faces a delay. A Long March 7A rocket lifted off at 7:20 a.m. Eastern (1220 UTC)  Nov. 30 from Wenchang Satellite Launch Center on the southern island of Hainan. The China Aerospace

China’s Private Home-Sale Data Vanishes After Vanke Turmoil

(Bloomberg) — Two of China’s private data agencies skipped releasing data on monthly home sales by the country’s top developers, after state-backed China Vanke Co. stirred market concerns with its bond extension bid. China Real Estate Information Corp. and China Index Academy, which are among the country’s biggest private property data providers, didn’t disclose the

Zootopia 2 breaks records in China with $275 million opening — TradingView News

Zootopia 2 breaks records in China with $275 million opening — TradingView News

By Casey Hall and Nicoco Chan Disney’s DIS Zootopia 2 became the highest-grossing animated foreign film ever in China, despite generally muted interest in overseas movies in the country. As of Monday morning Beijing time, box office tracker Maoyan showed Zootopia 2’s local box office tally reaching 1.95 billion yuan ($275.6 million) in its first

Economic calendar in Asia Monday, December 1, 2025

Economic calendar in Asia Monday, December 1, 2025

Two focal points today, Bank of Japan Governor Ueda speaking and another PMI from China. The December (18-19) Bank of Japan meeting is very much ‘live’, a rate hike potential is there: investingLive Asia-Pacific FX news wrap: Upbeat data from Japan, sticky inflation too Tokyo inflation stays hot as yen weakens, pushing BOJ closer to

ET logo

China’s November factory activity swings back to decline, private PMI shows

China‘s factory activity in November contracted slightly as production growth came to a halt and new orders slowed, a private-sector survey showed on Monday. The RatingDog China General Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), compiled by S&P Global, dropped to 49.9 in November from 50.6 in October, missing analysts’ expectations of 50.5 in a Reuters poll.

Zootopia 2 Sets Record, Best Hollywood Haul in Years

Zootopia 2 Sets Record, Best Hollywood Haul in Years

Disney’s smash-hit animated sequel Zootopia 2 got off to a stunning start in China over the holiday weekend, opening with an enormous $272 million five-day box office haul. It was the kind of powerful performance that once had Hollywood executives wildly bullish on the market potential of the world’s most populous nation, but which grew

Overseas Sales Surge as LANDKING Earns Strong Global Recognition

QINGDAO, China, Dec. 1, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — Amid the global commercial vehicle market’s rapid transformation, Weichai NECV’s overseas business thrives. As of October, overseas sales rose 71% year-on-year, underscoring solid international expansion. Recently, its LANDKING brand unveiled a new product portfolio, with 30 new models debuting to highlight its technological strength and industrial layout. A wholly

China successfully completes latest satellite launch

China successfully completes latest satellite launch

A modified Long March 7 carrier rocket carrying the Shijian 28 satellite blasts off from the Wenchang Spacecraft Launch Site in Hainan province, Nov 30, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua] China launched a Long March 7A carrier rocket on Sunday night to send a satellite into orbit, according to China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp. The State-owned space

Talent cultivation key to self-reliance in sci-tech

Talent cultivation key to self-reliance in sci-tech

SHI YU/CHINA DAILY Editor’s note: Recommendations of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China for Formulating the 15th Five-Year Plan for National Economic and Social Development outline a series of measures for achieving self-reliance in science and technology over the next five years. President of the Chinese Academy of Sciences Hou Jianguo spoke

school of colorful jellyfish

China’s New Stealthy Military Drone Doesn’t Fly At All

China is no stranger to high-tech drone technology, including its use in aerial combat. During the Victory Day military parade in Beijing on September 3rd, the world caught a glimpse of China’s latest military innovations — this time an unmanned underwater drone system with advanced intelligence capabilities. The People’s Liberation Army Navy’s new technology could be

Moonshot and MiniMax step up as China’s new frontier AI labs

Chinese artificial intelligence start-ups Moonshot AI and MiniMax have emerged as China’s strongest contenders to rival US frontier labs in 2025 – even as DeepSeek has stolen the spotlight as the poster child for the country’s AI ambitions. Moonshot AI, founded by 33-year-old Yang Zhilin, has sharply raised its profile in China’s AI ecosystem with

Hong Kong fire: Citizens' anger over 146 deaths spills on to streets, demand fair probe; China slaps sedition law

Hong Kong fire: Citizens’ anger over 146 deaths spills on to streets, demand fair probe; China slaps sedition law

Public anger over Hong Kong’s deadliest residential fire in decades has spilled into the streets, even as a student activist who demanded accountability was reportedly detained under the city’s national security regime.Miles Kwan, 24, had been distributing flyers outside a city train station on Friday, urging commuters to support an independent investigation into the blaze

0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x