HomeNewsOpinionChina’s military-industrial complex has a quality problem

China’s military-industrial complex has a quality problem

From Pakistan to Bangladesh, clients are disappointed. It’s trailing the US and France, but it’s premature to write off China 

June 26, 2024 / 08:15 IST
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CHINA-RUSSIA
The ubiquitous perception was that China’s arms exports would increase since Russia’s arms exports decreased.

Recently, Bangladesh complained about faulty Chinese spare parts for its Navy. As it emerges, all three military branches of Bangladesh are struggling with ‘sub-standard’ Chinese supplies. Many other countries (including Pakistan) are also unhappy about the poor quality of Chinese military supplies. Again, in March this year, SIPRI published a Report on ‘Trends in International Arms Transfers, 2023’. It emerged that Chinese arms exports declined by 5.3% during 2019-23 compared to 2014-18 period. All these indicate that China’s domestic military-industrial complex (MIC) is undergoing a bad phase and China’s fortunes, as an arms exporter, is insecure.

China is yet to respond to Bangladesh or any other country about the poor quality of weapons. In all probability, it will ignore the complaints. Similarly, it may plead that the universal trends in international arms transfers in last five years have not been encouraging. For example, the global volume of international arms transfers decreased marginally by 3.3% during 2019-23 compared to 2014-18 period.

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Not Able to Fill The Gap Left By Russia

Such an excuse, however, is meaningless since China has been positioning itself as the global production-house for cheap weapons, soliciting African and Asian countries.