Analysts said the new ranking shows China's military industry has gained momentum, but that the main advantage of arms produced by China is the low price rather than core technology, state-run Global Times here reported.
Chinese exports of major weapons increased by 212 per cent during 2009-2013, compared with the previous five-year period, and China's share of global arms exports increased from 2 to 6 per cent, it quoted a report released by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI).
China supplied major weapons to 35 states in the past five years, mainly low and middle-income countries. Almost three-quarters of Chinese exports went to just three clients: Pakistan, Bangladesh and Myanmar, the report said.
In the latest, China is building a stealth frigate for Nigeria.
China's rapidly developing military technology partly explains its expansion as an arms supplier, in direct competition with Russia, the US and European states, said the report.
"The progress in the military industry has been made due to the nation's increase in investments in the field," Shan Xiufa, a research fellow at the Academy of Military Sciences of the People's Liberation Army, said.
"Weapons produced by China are price competitive and the country is skillful in combining others' technology," Shan said, noting that it is a reflection of the country's relatively low innovative capability in general industry.
Liu Weidong, an expert on the US with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said that China was not comparable with world powers in increasing political influence through arms sales.
According to SIPRI report, the five biggest importers were India, China, Pakistan, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia.
