Military Expenditures (% of GDP) 2009
Military Expenditures as a percentage of GDP highlights national defense spending. Compare countries, explore rankings, and view trends.
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Complete Data Rankings
Rank | ||
|---|---|---|
1 | Antigua and Barbuda | NaN % of GDP |
2 | Burundi | 5.9 % of GDP |
3 | Angola | 5.7 % of GDP |
4 | Bahrain | 4.5 % of GDP |
5 | Bosnia and Herzegovina | 4.5 % of GDP |
6 | Brunei Darussalam | 4.5 % of GDP |
7 | China | 4.3 % of GDP |
8 | Chad | 4.2 % of GDP |
9 | Cuba | 3.8 % of GDP |
10 | Cyprus | 3.8 % of GDP |
11 | Djibouti | 3.8 % of GDP |
12 | Colombia | 3.4 % of GDP |
13 | Algeria | 3.3 % of GDP |
14 | Botswana | 3.3 % of GDP |
15 | United Arab Emirates | 3.1 % of GDP |
16 | Congo | 3.1 % of GDP |
17 | Solomon Islands | 3 % of GDP |
18 | Cambodia | 3 % of GDP |
19 | Comoros | 2.8 % of GDP |
20 | Chile | 2.7 % of GDP |
21 | Azerbaijan | 2.6 % of GDP |
22 | Brazil | 2.6 % of GDP |
23 | Bulgaria | 2.6 % of GDP |
24 | Sri Lanka | 2.6 % of GDP |
25 | Congo, Democratic Republic of the | 2.5 % of GDP |
26 | Australia | 2.4 % of GDP |
27 | Myanmar | 2.1 % of GDP |
28 | Afghanistan | 1.9 % of GDP |
29 | Bolivia | 1.9 % of GDP |
30 | Benin | 1.7 % of GDP |
31 | Bangladesh | 1.5 % of GDP |
32 | Albania | 1.49 % of GDP |
33 | Belize | 1.4 % of GDP |
34 | Belarus | 1.4 % of GDP |
35 | Argentina | 1.3 % of GDP |
36 | Belgium | 1.3 % of GDP |
37 | Cameroon | 1.3 % of GDP |
38 | Denmark | 1.3 % of GDP |
39 | Canada | 1.1 % of GDP |
40 | Central African Republic | 1.1 % of GDP |
41 | Bhutan | 1 % of GDP |
42 | Austria | 0.9 % of GDP |
43 | Cabo Verde | 0.7 % of GDP |
44 | Barbados | 0.5 % of GDP |
45 | Bahamas | 0.5 % of GDP |
46 | Costa Rica | 0.4 % of GDP |
47 | Bermuda | 0.11 % of GDP |
48 | Dominica | NaN % of GDP |
49 | Iraq | 8.6 % of GDP |
50 | Jordan | 8.6 % of GDP |
51 | Israel | 7.3 % of GDP |
52 | Eritrea | 6.3 % of GDP |
53 | Kuwait | 5.3 % of GDP |
54 | El Salvador | 5 % of GDP |
55 | Greece | 4.3 % of GDP |
56 | Egypt | 3.4 % of GDP |
57 | Gabon | 3.4 % of GDP |
58 | Ethiopia | 3 % of GDP |
59 | Indonesia | 3 % of GDP |
60 | Ecuador | 2.8 % of GDP |
61 | Kenya | 2.8 % of GDP |
62 | South Korea | 2.7 % of GDP |
63 | France | 2.6 % of GDP |
64 | India | 2.5 % of GDP |
65 | Iran | 2.5 % of GDP |
66 | Croatia | 2.39 % of GDP |
67 | Fiji | 2.2 % of GDP |
68 | Estonia | 2 % of GDP |
69 | Finland | 2 % of GDP |
70 | Guyana | 1.8 % of GDP |
71 | Italy | 1.8 % of GDP |
72 | Hungary | 1.75 % of GDP |
73 | Guinea | 1.7 % of GDP |
74 | Côte d'Ivoire | 1.6 % of GDP |
75 | Germany | 1.5 % of GDP |
76 | Czech Republic | 1.46 % of GDP |
77 | Kyrgyzstan | 1.4 % of GDP |
78 | Ireland | 0.9 % of GDP |
79 | Dominican Republic | 0.8 % of GDP |
80 | Ghana | 0.8 % of GDP |
81 | Japan | 0.8 % of GDP |
82 | Honduras | 0.6 % of GDP |
83 | Georgia | 0.59 % of GDP |
84 | Haiti | 0.4 % of GDP |
85 | Equatorial Guinea | 0.1 % of GDP |
86 | Falkland Islands (Malvinas) | NaN % of GDP |
87 | Faroe Islands | NaN % of GDP |
88 | Gambia | 0.5 % of GDP |
89 | Grenada | NaN % of GDP |
90 | Jamaica | 0.6 % of GDP |
91 | Guatemala | 0.4 % of GDP |
92 | Iceland | 0 % of GDP |
93 | North Korea | NaN % of GDP |
94 | Kiribati | NaN % of GDP |
95 | Oman | 11.4 % of GDP |
96 | Qatar | 10 % of GDP |
97 | North Macedonia | 6 % of GDP |
98 | Mauritania | 5.5 % of GDP |
99 | Maldives | 5.5 % of GDP |
100 | Morocco | 5 % of GDP |
101 | Libya | 3.9 % of GDP |
102 | Lebanon | 3.1 % of GDP |
103 | Guinea-Bissau | 3.1 % of GDP |
104 | Pakistan | 3 % of GDP |
105 | Lesotho | 2.6 % of GDP |
106 | Portugal | 2.3 % of GDP |
107 | Malaysia | 2.03 % of GDP |
108 | Mali | 1.9 % of GDP |
109 | Norway | 1.9 % of GDP |
110 | Romania | 1.9 % of GDP |
111 | Slovakia | 1.87 % of GDP |
112 | Poland | 1.71 % of GDP |
113 | Netherlands | 1.6 % of GDP |
114 | Nepal | 1.6 % of GDP |
115 | Nigeria | 1.5 % of GDP |
116 | Peru | 1.5 % of GDP |
117 | Mongolia | 1.4 % of GDP |
118 | Papua New Guinea | 1.4 % of GDP |
119 | Liberia | 1.3 % of GDP |
120 | Malawi | 1.3 % of GDP |
121 | Niger | 1.3 % of GDP |
122 | Latvia | 1.2 % of GDP |
123 | Lithuania | 1.2 % of GDP |
124 | Madagascar | 1 % of GDP |
125 | New Zealand | 1 % of GDP |
126 | Paraguay | 1 % of GDP |
127 | Panama | 1 % of GDP |
128 | Kazakhstan | 0.9 % of GDP |
129 | Luxembourg | 0.9 % of GDP |
130 | Philippines | 0.9 % of GDP |
131 | Mozambique | 0.8 % of GDP |
132 | Malta | 0.7 % of GDP |
133 | Suriname | 0.6 % of GDP |
134 | Nicaragua | 0.6 % of GDP |
135 | Laos | 0.5 % of GDP |
136 | Mexico | 0.5 % of GDP |
137 | Republic of Moldova | 0.4 % of GDP |
138 | Mauritius | 0.3 % of GDP |
139 | New Caledonia | NaN % of GDP |
140 | Vanuatu | NaN % of GDP |
141 | Nauru | NaN % of GDP |
142 | Saudi Arabia | 10 % of GDP |
143 | Yemen | 6.6 % of GDP |
144 | Syrian Arab Republic | 5.9 % of GDP |
145 | Singapore | 4.9 % of GDP |
146 | Eswatini | 4.7 % of GDP |
147 | United States | 4.06 % of GDP |
148 | Russia | 3.9 % of GDP |
149 | Tajikistan | 3.9 % of GDP |
150 | Zimbabwe | 3.8 % of GDP |
151 | Rwanda | 2.9 % of GDP |
152 | Saint Kitts and Nevis | NaN % of GDP |
153 | Turkey | 5.3 % of GDP |
154 | Namibia | 3.7 % of GDP |
155 | Turkmenistan | 3.4 % of GDP |
156 | Vietnam | 2.5 % of GDP |
157 | United Kingdom | 2.4 % of GDP |
158 | Sierra Leone | 2.3 % of GDP |
159 | Taiwan | 2.2 % of GDP |
160 | Uganda | 2.2 % of GDP |
161 | Seychelles | 2 % of GDP |
162 | Uzbekistan | 2 % of GDP |
163 | Thailand | 1.8 % of GDP |
164 | Zambia | 1.8 % of GDP |
165 | South Africa | 1.7 % of GDP |
166 | Slovenia | 1.7 % of GDP |
167 | Togo | 1.6 % of GDP |
168 | Sweden | 1.5 % of GDP |
169 | Senegal | 1.4 % of GDP |
170 | San Marino | NaN % of GDP |
171 | Uruguay | 1.6 % of GDP |
172 | Tunisia | 1.4 % of GDP |
173 | Ukraine | 1.4 % of GDP |
174 | Spain | 1.2 % of GDP |
175 | Burkina Faso | 1.2 % of GDP |
176 | Venezuela | 1.2 % of GDP |
177 | Switzerland | 1 % of GDP |
178 | Somalia | 0.9 % of GDP |
179 | Saint Lucia | NaN % of GDP |
180 | Tonga | 0.9 % of GDP |
181 | Sao Tome and Principe | 0.8 % of GDP |
182 | Trinidad and Tobago | 0.3 % of GDP |
183 | Timor-Leste | NaN % of GDP |
184 | Tuvalu | NaN % of GDP |
185 | Tanzania | 0.2 % of GDP |
186 | Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | NaN % of GDP |
187 | Samoa | NaN % of GDP |
- #1
Antigua and Barbuda
- #2
Burundi
- #3
Angola
- #4
Bahrain
- #5
Bosnia and Herzegovina
- #6
Brunei Darussalam
- #7
China
- #8
Chad
- #9
Cuba
- #10
Cyprus
Analysis: These countries represent the highest values in this dataset, showcasing significant scale and impact on global statistics.
- #187
Samoa
- #186
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
- #185
Tanzania
- #184
Tuvalu
- #183
Timor-Leste
- #182
Trinidad and Tobago
- #181
Sao Tome and Principe
- #180
Tonga
- #179
Saint Lucia
- #178
Somalia
Context: These countries or territories have the lowest values, often due to geographic size, administrative status, or specific characteristics.
Analysis & Context
In 2009, Oman led the world in Military Expenditures (% of GDP) with a staggering 11.4%, while countries globally ranged from 0.00% to 11.40%. The average expenditure was 2.45%, providing a baseline for understanding how countries prioritize defense spending within their economies.
Middle Eastern Dominance in Military Spending
The Middle East stood out as a region with exceptionally high military expenditures in 2009. Countries like Oman at 11.4%, Qatar and Saudi Arabia both at 10%, and Iraq and Jordan each at 8.6% dominated the top of the list. This pattern can largely be attributed to geopolitical tensions and the strategic importance of the region's oil reserves. The presence of significant military infrastructure and ongoing conflicts necessitated substantial military budgets. Additionally, the wealth generated from oil exports allows these nations to allocate a significant portion of their GDP to defense.
Minimal Military Investment in Peaceful Regions
At the opposite end of the spectrum, countries like Iceland and Equatorial Guinea recorded minimal military expenditures, with 0% and 0.1% of GDP, respectively. These figures reflect the peaceful geopolitical stances and the limited perceived threats facing these nations. Iceland, without a standing army, relies on NATO for defense, exemplifying how strategic alliances can influence military spending. Similarly, countries such as Trinidad and Tobago and Mauritius with expenditures around 0.3%, prioritize internal security and economic development over military expansion.
Economic and Political Drivers of Military Spending
Military expenditures are often influenced by a combination of economic capability and political priorities. In countries like Israel with a military expenditure of 7.3%, national security is a significant concern due to regional threats, leading to higher defense budgets. Conversely, nations such as Guatemala and Haiti, both at 0.4%, may allocate fewer resources to defense due to limited economic capacity and a focus on addressing domestic issues such as poverty and infrastructure development.
Year-over-Year Stability and Changes
The data from 2009 showed minimal year-over-year changes in military expenditures, with an average change of -0.00% (-0.1%). However, specific countries did experience notable shifts. Denmark, for instance, saw a decrease of 0.20% (-13.3%), reflecting possible budget reallocations or changes in defense policy. In contrast, countries like Oman, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia maintained steady expenditure levels, indicating a continued emphasis on military readiness amidst regional security concerns.
Overall, the data for 2009 underscores the varying priorities and economic capabilities of nations worldwide in relation to military spending. Regions with geopolitical tensions and substantial economic resources tend to allocate more GDP to defense, while peaceful regions with strategic alliances or economic constraints spend significantly less. Understanding these patterns provides valuable insight into the geopolitical landscape and economic strategies of different countries.
Data Source
CIA World Factbook
The World Factbook, also known as the CIA World Factbook, was a reference resource produced by the US Central Intelligence Agency between 1962 and 2026 with almanac-style information about the countries of the world. From 1971 it was not classified, and available to the public in print since 1975, initially by the CIA, and later the Government Publishing Office.
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