Australia to raise defence spending to 3% of GDP by 2033
Australia will significantly boost its defense spending to three percent of its gross domestic product by 2033. This move responds to the most challenging global security environment since World War Two. The government plans substantial investment...

The expansion would be achieved through an additional A$14 billion ($10 billion) in expenditure over four years and A$53 billion over the next decade, the government said.
Australia has been looking to develop its defence capabilities amid concerns over rising global geopolitical tensions and China's tussle with the U.S. for influence in the Indo-Pacific.
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The Trump administration in the U.S. has called on Canberra to lift defence spending to 3.5% of GDP.
Australia's centre-left Labor government will outline the spending in the Integrated Investment Program due to be released on Thursday, with the biennial National Defence Strategy.
"Australia faces its most complex and threatening strategic circumstances since the end of World War Two," Defence Minister Richard Marles is expected to say in a speech in Canberra on Thursday to launch the latest strategy.
"International norms that once constrained the use of force and military coercion continue to erode."
"The result is that we are now seeing the biggest peacetime increase in defence spending in our nation's history."
Australia's defence spending currently sits at around 2% of GDP.
The government has already committed an additional A$50 billion in spending over the next decade to reach 2.33% in 2033-34.
Taken together, it means Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's government has committed an additional A$117 billion in spending over the next decade.
The government said the money would be spent on "capabilities that increase the ADF's (Australian Defence Force) ability to deter and respond to current and emerging threats, while also investing in the longer term to build a more self-reliant ADF."
Australia will pay for the expanded expenditure through bigger defence appropriations and accessing private capital, Marles is expected to say.
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