In an annual report required by Congress, the Pentagon said yesterday that China's defence budget for 2013 was higher than the officially announced USD 119.5 billion.
"We think that if you start factoring in other considerations, other funding streams that go into the military, other investments that are not included in the defence budget, that it could be up to USD 145 billion," a Pentagon official said of the report.
The United States and its allies, especially Japan, have repeatedly voiced concern about the Chinese military's lack of transparency amid growing tensions between Beijing and neighbouring countries over maritime disputes.
The USD 145 billion estimate "reflects an improvement in our understanding of how China develops its defence budget," the official said.
"But I would say there's a lot that we still don't know about China's defence spending and that's an area where we encourage China to be more transparent," he said.
In March, China announced a new hike of 12.2 per cent in its defence budget to an official 808.23 billion yuan (USD 132 billion) for 2014.
China dismissed foreign criticism, with the state-run China Daily saying, "World peace needs a militarily stronger China."
In 2013, Russia's defence budget was USD 69.5 billion, Japan's was USD 56.9 billion, with India at USD 39.2 billion and South Korea at USD 31 billion.
But China's budget is much lower than that of the United States, by far the world's largest military power, which has a USD 495.5 billion defence budget in 2013 along with another USD 82 billion allocated for the Afghanistan war.
