TAIPEI, Taiwan — Taiwan's defense spending will rise 7.7% next year, outpacing expected economic growth, the Cabinet said on Thursday, as the island adds more fighter jets and missiles to strengthen deterrence against a rising threat from Beijing.
China, which views democratically governed Taiwan as its own territory, has ramped up military and political pressure over the past five years to assert those claims, which Taipei strongly rejects.
Taiwan's Cabinet said following a regular weekly meeting that 2025 defense spending would rise 7.7% year-on-year to $20.25 billion, accounting for 2.45% of gross domestic product and exceeding the government's expectation for economic growth of 3.26% for the year.
The spending includes a special budget worth $2.8 billion to buy new fighter jets and ramp up missile production. That was part of the military's extra spending worth $7.5 billion announced in 2021 over five years.
Taiwan's government has made military modernization a key policy platform and has repeatedly pledged to spend more on its defenses given the rising threat from China, including developing made-in-Taiwan submarines.
China's air force flies almost daily missions into the skies near Taiwan, and in May staged war games around the island shortly after President Lai Ching-te took office, a man Beijing brands a "separatist." Lai rejects China's sovereignty claims, saying only Taiwan's people can decide their future.
The budget will still need to be passed by parliament, where the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) lost its majority in January elections.
Taiwan's main opposition party, the Kuomintang, has repeatedly expressed its support for firming up the island's defenses, though it is currently involved in a standoff with the DPP about contested reforms to give parliament greater oversight powers the government says is unconstitutional.
China is also rapidly modernizing its armed forces, with new aircraft carriers, stealth fighter jets and missiles.
China in March announced a 7.2% rise in defense spending for this year to $234.10 billion outpacing the economic growth target of around 5% for 2024, though accounting for only some 1.3% of GDP according to analysts.