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| A North Korean Army soldier looks at the southern side using binoculars at the border village of Panmunjom, (DMZ), that separates the two Koreas since the Korean War. (AP) |
The North said it spent US$570 million on its military in 2009, but the real expenditure, calculated on an exchange rate based on purchasing power parity terms, was $8.77 billion, the state-run Korea Institute of Defense Analyses (KIDA) said in a report.
"In spite of its economy shrinking since the mid-2000s, North Korea has gradually increased its military spending," the report said.
North Korea maintains the world's fifth-largest army with an active duty military force of 1.19 million, compared to about 655,000 in the South.
According to figures released by North Korea, its military spending rose to $570 million in 2009 from $540 million in 2008, $510 million in 2007 and $470 million in 2006, the KIDA said.
As of 2009, North Korea's gross national income stood at 28.6 trillion won ($25 billion), compared with the South's 1,068 trillion won, the KIDA said.
(Yonhap News)
















