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Defense Policy

Japan's defense buildup: the biggest shift since WWII

7 min read · Updated May 2026

For most of the postwar period, Japan's defense spending was capped near 1% of GDP — a self-imposed limit reflecting the country's pacifist constitution. That changed in late 2022, when Prime Minister Kishida announced Japan would double its defense budget to roughly 2% of GDP by 2027.

This is approximately ¥43 trillion in defense spending over five years — the largest sustained increase in postwar Japanese history.

"Japan stands at a turning point in history." — National Security Strategy, December 2022

Why now?

Three factors converged:

Japan also faces a generational reckoning with deferred procurement: aging F-15 fighters, submarine fleet renewal needs, and an arsenal designed for a previous era.

Where the money is going

Seven priority areas: standoff defense capabilities (long-range missiles), integrated air and missile defense, unmanned systems, cross-domain operations, command and control, mobile deployment, and supply chain sustainability.

The listed companies that benefit

Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (7011.T)

Japan's largest defense contractor. MHI is involved in fighter aircraft (including the next-gen GCAP fighter program with the UK and Italy), destroyers, missiles, and ground systems.

IHI Corporation (7013.T)

IHI manufactures jet engines for Japan's F-15J fleet and the F-2 fleet, and is co-developing engines for next-generation fighters.

Kawasaki Heavy Industries (7012.T)

Japan's primary submarine builder. As Japan looks to expand its submarine fleet from 22 to 24+ boats, Kawasaki is a direct beneficiary.

The setup: Japan's defense buildup is a multi-year structural story, not a one-time spike. For listed contractors, this means a sustained expansion in revenue and likely improvement in margins as scale increases. The execution risk is real — Japan's defense procurement is historically slow.

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