NORINCO arms revenue drops 31% as China's weapons exports stall
Anti-corruption probes, contract delays and a Pakistan buying collapse drag Chinese sales to a 15-year low
Summary
Norinco, the main supplier of China's ground forces and a top global arms maker, saw arms revenue fall ~31% — from about $20.3bn (2023) to ~$14.0bn (2024) — the steepest drop of any major producer. China's total weapons exports for 2020–24 sank to roughly a 15-year low, and Beijing slipped out of SIPRI's top-four suppliers, displaced by Germany. Drivers: anti-corruption purges that removed NORINCO's board chairman and military-division head, contract reviews and delays, a cautious bureaucracy, and a collapse in Pakistan purchases — Pakistan was ~63% of Chinese exports in 2020–24 but bought two-thirds less in 2024. Beijing may also be muting weapons publicity to project a "peace-promoting" image — see SIPRI: global arms flows up ~10% as European imports surge and Russia collapses.
By the numbers
- -31% — NORINCO arms revenue YoY (~$20.3bn → ~$14.0bn).
- ~15-year low — China's total weapons-export value (2024).
- ~63% — Pakistan's share of Chinese exports, 2020–24.
- ~-67% — drop in Pakistani arms purchases, 2024 vs 2023.
- 4th → out — China displaced from SIPRI's top-four suppliers by Germany.
Why it matters
China's arms-export stall reverses a decade of expansion just as Russia's exports collapse and the West's surge — reshaping who arms the global south. NORINCO's purge-driven slump shows how Xi's anti-corruption drive directly throttles a strategic industry.
What to watch
- Whether Pakistan orders rebound (JF-17, frigates, air defence).
- Resolution of NORINCO leadership/contract reviews.
- China's pivot toward arms-for-minerals deals (DR Congo, Iran).