South America registered the largest regional increase in military
expenditure in 2010, up 5.8% in real terms to US$63.3bn, according to a study
released by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (Sipri). The
average annual increase in the region between 2001 and 2009 was 3.7%. The Sipri
report said the finding was “surprising given the lack of real military threats
to most states in the region, and the existence of more pressing social needs".
This is a point made most forcibly by Peru's President Alan García, who has
tried over the last 18 months to win support for a five-year plan to cut arms
spending in the region and devote the savings to eradicating poverty. García has
made some scarcely veiled criticism of Venezuelan arms spending and yet,
ironically, Sipri's figures show that the fastest percentage increase in
military expenditure in the region in 2010 was in Peru, while the biggest
decrease was in Venezuela.
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