150 Politics and international relations
to the west of the Imperial Palace (Forbidden City) in Beijing, which is where the senior leadership live and work – China’s Kremlin. There is a clear boundary between the PAP, which is part of the military and recruits many former soldiers, and the civilian police authorities, the Gong’anju, which are the responsibility of the Ministry of Public Security (Gong’anbu).
In March 2003, the NPC was presented with a budget for increasing military expenditure by 9.6 per cent, the lowest increase for over a decade. China has increased its expenditure on the PLA each year, although it is widely assumed that the publicly announced budget represents only perhaps a quarter of the real total expenditure once the costs of the purchase of armaments and research and development are included.9
The PLA has also played a part in economic development, particularly in the outlying areas, and has been called upon for support by the civil authorities in times of natural disasters – for example, during the great earthquake which devastated the Tangshan region in 1976 and in the many episodes of severe fl ooding in southern China. The PLA played a major part in the rescue and relief effort after both the Sichuan earthquake and the fl oods of 2008.
Conscription and volunteers
Although all citizens of the PRC are formally required to be available for military service, in peacetime this is entirely voluntary and there is generally no shortage of recruits, who traditionally came from the rural areas. Service in the PLA still confers status and not only is it a way for young peasants to leave their home villages and travel around China but it is also a sound basis for securing a gov- ernment job later in life. At the age of eighteen, everyone has to register with the government authorities unless they have a place at a university, in which case they will be required to undertake a programme of military training at the beginning of their course.
The PLA conducts its nationwide recruitment exercise once a year during the winter and the formal basis for recruitment and conscription is the Military Service Law of 1984 which provides for compulsory and voluntary elements of military service and for the operation of a militia in addition to the regular armed forces. All citizens between the ages of eighteen and twenty-two are technically eligible for military service. They become eligible on 31 December of the year in which they reach their eighteenth birthday, are required to register before 30 September of that year and then remain eligible for conscription until they are twenty-two years of age. The assumption is that most recruits will be men but women are also enlisted. No one who is the sole breadwinner for their family or is a full-time student can be required to enlist.
Out of almost ten million men who reach military age in any given year, fewer than 10 per cent are in fact recruited into the army and the number of women who are recruited annually is small. During the 1980s the PLA modifi ed its conscription policies in an attempt to increase the quality of recruits. The higher educational standards that have been required since then went some way to counter the previous
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