Military Industry - World's Largest Arms Exporters

World's Largest Arms Exporters

The unit in this table are so-called trend indicator values expressed in millions of US dollars at 1990s prices. These values do not represent real financial flows but are a crude instrument to estimate volumes of arms transfers, regardless of the contracted prices, which can be as low as zero in the case of military aid. Ordered by descending 2000–2010 values. The information is from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.

2001–12 Rank Supplier 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
1 United States 5908 5229 5698 6866 6700 7453 8003 6288 6658 8641 - -
2 Russia 5896 5705 5236 6178 5134 5095 5426 5953 5575 6039 7676 7967
3 Germany 850 916 1713 1105 2080 2567 3194 2500 2432 2340 - -
4 France 1297 1368 1345 2219 1724 1643 2432 1994 1865 1834 - -
5 United Kingdom 1368 1068 741 1316 1039 855 1018 982 1022 1054 - -
6 China 499 509 665 292 303 597 430 586 1000 1423 - -
7 Italy 880 191 526 314 538 432 366 454 383 806 - -
8 Israel 203 239 342 209 583 1187 1326 530 545 503 - -
9 Sweden 216 426 341 212 774 502 684 417 514 627 - -
10 Ukraine 700 311 442 200 290 553 728 330 320 201 - -
11 Spain 7 120 150 56 108 843 590 610 998 513 - -
12 Switzerland 193 157 181 243 246 285 301 482 255 137 - -
13 Canada 129 170 263 265 226 226 334 227 169 258 - -
14 South Korea 165 N/A 100 29 48 94 220 80 163 95 - -

The information is also from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute or from the national defence commissions where available and is updated at least once a year.

Next to SIPRI there are several other sources that provide data on international transfers of arms. These include national reports by national governments about arms exports, the UN register on conventional arms and an annual publication by the US Congressional Research Service that includes data on arms exports to developing countries as compiled by US intelligence agencies. A list of such sources can be found at the SIPRI website. Due to the different methodologies and definitions used different sources often provide significantly different data. For example, according to Statistisk sentralbyrå (Norway state statistics), Norway exports a greater value (in USD) of arms than many of the nations listed above.

Some of the differences are possibly due to deliberate over- or under-reporting by some of the sources. Governments may claim high arms exports as part of their role in marketing efforts of their national arms industry or they may claim low arms exports in order to be perceived as a responsible international actor.

As of 2008 Britain has become the worlds leading developer of arms with British company BAE Systems. Defence group BAE Systems is the first company outside the U.S. to reach the top position,thanks to a deal with the Pentagon for mine-resistant vehicles to be used in Iraq and Afghanistan. According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, a defence think tank, the former British Aerospace group's arms sales are ahead of American market leaders Lockheed Martin and Boeing. The report reveals BAE's U.S. subsidiary was alone responsible for 61.5 per cent of the group's arms sales and around 58.5 per cent of total group sales. This demonstrates BAE's increasing reliance on orders for conventional weapons as the U.S. cuts back on its nuclear arsenal. The British figures were also boosted by orders for Eurofighter Typhoon jets from Saudi Arabia.

After the success of Pakistan's major developments in the defence industry the Defence Export Promotion Organisation (D.E.P.O.) was created to promote Pakistani defence equipment to the world by inviting major and small players to the I.D.E.A.S. Exhibition, which is held annually at the Karachi expo center. In recent reports, the defence exports were worth over $500 million USD in 2006 and growing annually.

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