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Military Stats: compare key data on European Union & Germany

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Definitions

  • Active Ground Forces > Active Personnel > 2008: Strength of active personnel in ground forces of European Union member states in 2008. Figures do not include personnel in navy and air force.
  • Active Ground Forces > Active Personnel > 2008 per 1000: Strength of active personnel in ground forces of European Union member states in 2008. Figures do not include personnel in navy and air force. Figures expressed per thousand population for the same year.
  • Active Ground Forces > Active troops/thousand citizens: Active personnel in ground forces per thousand citizens of European Union member states in 2008. Figures do not include personnel in navy and air force.
  • Active Ground Forces > Total: Total ground forces of European Union member states in 2008. Figures include active personnel, reserve forces as well as paramilitary forces.
  • Active Ground Forces > Total per 1000: Total ground forces of European Union member states in 2008. Figures include active personnel, reserve forces as well as paramilitary forces. Figures expressed per thousand population for the same year.
  • Active Ground Forces > Transport aircraft: Number of transport aircraft possessed by member states of the European Union in 2008.
  • Active Ground Forces > Transport aircraft per million: Number of transport aircraft possessed by member states of the European Union in 2008. Figures expressed per million population for the same year.
  • Armed forces personnel > % of total labor force: Armed forces personnel are active duty military personnel, including paramilitary forces if the training, organisation, equipment, and control suggest they may be used to support or replace regular military forces. Labor force comprises all people who meet the International Labour Organisation's definition of the economically active population."
  • Armed forces personnel > Total: Armed forces personnel are active duty military personnel, including paramilitary forces if the training, organisation, equipment, and control suggest they may be used to support or replace regular military forces."
  • Defence spending > Percent of GDP: Defense expenditure as percentage of GDP. Figures are for the year 2010.
  • Imports > USD: Arms transfers cover the supply of military weapons through sales, aid, gifts, and those made through manufacturing licenses. Data cover major conventional weapons such as aircraft, armored vehicles, artillery, radar systems, missiles, and ships designed for military use. Excluded are transfers of other military equipment such as small arms and light weapons, trucks, small artillery, ammunition, support equipment, technology transfers, and other services."
  • Military expenditure > % of GDP: Military expenditures data from SIPRI are derived from the NATO definition, which includes all current and capital expenditures on the armed forces, including peacekeeping forces; defense ministries and other government agencies engaged in defense projects; paramilitary forces, if these are judged to be trained and equipped for military operations; and military space activities. Such expenditures include military and civil personnel, including retirement pensions of military personnel and social services for 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, demobilisation, conversion, and destruction of weapons. This definition cannot be applied for all countries, however, since that would require much more detailed information than is available about what is included in military budgets and off-budget military expenditure items. (For example, military budgets might or might not cover civil defense, reserves and auxiliary forces, police and paramilitary forces, dual-purpose forces such as military and civilian police, military grants in kind, pensions for military personnel, and social security contributions paid by one part of government to another.)"
  • War deaths: Battle-related deaths are deaths in battle-related conflicts between warring parties in the conflict dyad (two conflict units that are parties to a conflict). Typically, battle-related deaths occur in warfare involving the armed forces of the warring parties. This includes traditional battlefield fighting, guerrilla activities, and all kinds of bombardments of military units, cities, and villages, etc. The targets are usually the military itself and its installations or state institutions and state representatives, but there is often substantial collateral damage in the form of civilians being killed in crossfire, in indiscriminate bombings, etc. All deaths--military as well as civilian--incurred in such situations, are counted as battle-related deaths."
STAT European Union Germany HISTORY
Active Ground Forces > Active Personnel > 2008 1.54 million
Ranked 1st. 7 times more than Germany
235,000
Ranked 2nd.
Active Ground Forces > Active Personnel > 2008 per 1000 3.05
Ranked 18th. 7% more than Germany
2.86
Ranked 19th.
Active Ground Forces > Active troops/thousand citizens 3.07
Ranked 22nd. 2% more than Germany
3.02
Ranked 23th.
Active Ground Forces > Total 6.88 million
Ranked 1st. 11 times more than Germany
630,000
Ranked 3rd.
Active Ground Forces > Total per 1000 13.67
Ranked 12th. 78% more than Germany
7.67
Ranked 22nd.
Active Ground Forces > Transport aircraft 1,349
Ranked 1st. 8 times more than Germany
176
Ranked 3rd.
Active Ground Forces > Transport aircraft per million 2.68
Ranked 13th. 25% more than Germany
2.14
Ranked 17th.
Armed forces personnel > % of total labor force 1%
Ranked 68th. 72% more than Germany
0.58%
Ranked 101st.

Armed forces personnel > Total 2.4 million
Ranked 3rd. 10 times more than Germany
244,000
Ranked 21st.

Defence spending > 2008[46] 2,009
Ranked 1st. The same as Germany
2,009
Ranked 6th.
Defence spending > Percent of GDP 1.63%
Ranked 7th. 28% more than Germany
1.27%
Ranked 17th.

Imports > USD 4.05 billion
Ranked 1st. 39 times more than Germany
104 million
Ranked 38th.

Military expenditure > % of GDP 1.82%
Ranked 48th. 34% more than Germany
1.36%
Ranked 73th.

War deaths 0.0
Ranked 102nd.
0.0
Ranked 35th.

SOURCES: Various sources compiled into Wikipedia's Military of the European Union; Various sources compiled into Wikipedia's Military of the European Union. Population figures from World Bank: (1) United Nations Population Division. World Population Prospects, (2) United Nations Statistical Division. Population and Vital Statistics Report (various years), (3) Census reports and other statistical publications from national statistical offices, (4) Eurostat: Demographic Statistics, (5) Secretariat of the Pacific Community: Statistics and Demography Programme, and (6) U.S. Census Bureau: International Database.; International Institute for Strategic Studies, The Military Balance.; Wikipedia: Military of the European Union; Stockholm International Peace Research Institute: The SIPRI Military Expenditure Database; Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), Yearbook: Armaments, Disarmament and International Security.; Uppsala Conflict Data Program, http://www.pcr.uu.se/research/ucdp/.

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