Politics

Federal government would have to double military spending to meet NATO target

The parliamentary budget officer says that if the federal government wants to meet NATO's military spending target by 2032 as promised, it will have to almost double defence spending to $81.9 billion.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau pledged Canada would meet NATO's 2% target by 2032

A Canadian soldier carries spent light anti-tank weapons following the conclusion of Exercise Steele Crescendo, which took place outside of Riga, Latvia, in 2020.
A Canadian soldier carries spent light anti-tank weapons following the conclusion of Exercise Steele Crescendo, which took place outside of Riga, Latvia, in 2020. All 32 NATO allies have agreed to spend at least two per cent of GDP annually on defence. (NATO)

The parliamentary budget officer says that if the federal government wants to meet NATO's military spending target by 2032 as promised, it will have to almost double defence spending to $81.9 billion.

The budget watchdog offered that conclusion in a report published Wednesday on the fiscal implications of meeting the NATO target, which stipulates that member states spend two per cent of their GDP on defence.

All 32 NATO allies have agreed to spend at least that amount on defence, but Canada is one of the only nations that has not presented a plan to reach the target. Twenty-three members already meet the target or say they will by the end of this year.

At the NATO leaders' summit in Washington, D.C., in June, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau pledged that Canada would meet the spending target by 2032.

Trudeau was under increasing pressure from allies, particularly U.S. politicians, to present a plan at the summit, which came a year after NATO leaders agreed to make two per cent a minimum spending target.

Republican presidential nominee and former president Donald Trump has said in the past that the U.S. would not offer protection to NATO allies who are not pulling their weight if he were to return to the White House. Mutual protection is a core tenet of the alliance.

Trudeau offered no details about where and how spending will increase. The PBO said Wednesday the government has not yet released figures detailing how it will get to the goal.

Canada's latest defence policy, which was released in April, estimated that overall defence spending would grow to 1.76 per cent of GDP by the end of the decade.

Watch | Blair 'confident' Canada can hit NATO target, says PBO uses different calculations

Blair ‘confident’ Canada will be able to meet NATO target, says PBO uses different calculations

28 days ago
Duration 2:51
Minister of National Defence Bill Blair says ‘it's not just about how much money we have to spend, it’s about the capabilities we have to create for the Canadian Armed Forces.’ The parliamentary budget officer released a report Wednesday saying the government would need to almost double defence spending to meet the NATO spending target by 2032.

However, the PBO says that forecast was based on erroneous economic growth projections that assume the country would be in a four-year recession.

"Using PBO GDP figures, which are broadly in line with the Department of Finance and other independent sources, the recalculated forecast places defence spending at just 1.58 per cent of GDP by 2029-30," the report said, up from 1.35 per cent in 2024-25.

The report says the federal government is expected to spend $41 billion on defence in the current fiscal year.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Nojoud Al Mallees

Reporter/Producer

Nojoud Al Mallees covers economics for The Canadian Press. She's based in Ottawa.