Military expenditure (% of gov. spending) | Italy – yearly data, chart and table

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Data for general government expenditure are from the IMF World Economic Outlook, and include spending by all levels of govt.: central/federal, state/provincial/regional, municipal and local government, etc.

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Source: SIPRI,
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SIPRI
https://www.sipri.org

IMF
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IMF
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Overview

Доля военных расходов в бюджете | Италия
The military expenditure share of government spending in Italy in 2024 was amounted to 3.18%. In 2023, the value was  2.99%. This is the first year of growth after a decline. Since 1988, for the whole period of data from SIPRI, this indicator has decreased in 1.27 times. The lowest military expenditure share of government spending was recorded in 2015, with a value of 2.39%. The highest value in Italy was in 1988, when it reached 4.03%.
Additional infomation: About indicator
SIPRI military expenditure data includes military and civil personnel, including retirement pensions and social services for military personnel; operation and maintenance; procurement; military research and development; and military aid (in the military expenditures of the donor country). Excluded are civil defense and current expenditures for previous military activities, such as for veterans' benefits, demobilization, and weapons conversion and destruction. This definition cannot be applied for all countries, however, since that would require more detailed information than is available about military budgets and off-budget military expenditures (for example, whether military budgets cover civil defense, reserves and auxiliary forces, police and paramilitary forces, and military pensions). SIPRI data for the most recent years include two types of estimate which apply to all countries: (a) figures for the most recent years are for adopted budgets, budget estimates or revised estimates, and are revised, more often than not, in subsequent years; and (b) the deflator used for the latest year in the series is an estimate. SIPRI's primary source of military expenditure data is official data provided by national governments. These data are derived from budget documents, defense white papers, and other public documents from official government agencies, including government responses to questionnaires sent by SIPRI, the UNODA, or the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe. Secondary sources include international statistics, such as those of NATO and the IMF's Government Finance Statistics Yearbook. Other secondary sources include country reports of the Economist Intelligence Unit, country reports by IMF staff, and specialist journals and newspapers. The SIPRI military expenditure figures are presented on a calendar-year basis. The only exception is the USA, for which statistics report data on a fiscal-year basis. Calendar-year data are calculated on the assumption of an even rate of expenditure throughout the fiscal year.