Summary: Global military spending outside the USA increased by 1.8% in 2013, highlighting the wealth of opportunities on offer in emerging markets.
The 1.8% increase is despite an overall worldwide fall in expenditure in real terms to $1.75 trillion, a fall of 1.9% according to figures released by Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI). This shows the sheer size of western spending, particularly the US, and highlights how important non-US markets can be to the overall military economy.
The fall in US spending in 2013, by 7.8%, is the result of the end of the war in Iraq, the beginning of the drawdown from Afghanistan and the effects of automatic budget cuts passed by the US Congress in 2011. Meanwhile, austerity policies continued to determine trends in Western and Central Europe and in other Western countries.