ADB official bats for Asia-wide free trade area
October 4, 2006 | 12:00am
Major obstacles block Asias prospects of becoming a common market, but a region-wide free trade area is a realistic goal, an Asian Development Bank (ADB) official said.
The Manila-based lender said 183 free trade agreements have either been signed or are being proposed or negotiated across Asia, where the share of intra-regional trade has risen to about 55 percent last year from some 40 percent in the early 1990s.
"Given the stalled Doha round of the World Trade Organization talks, it is vital for all Asian countries to continue their efforts to pursue further market opening and structural reforms," said Masahiro Kawai, head of the ADBs regional economic integration office.
He said the ultimate goal should be "consolidating the (various inter-Asian) FTAs (free trade agreements) into a single Asia-wide, best practices FTA," ensuring the expansion of free trade within the region.
Kawai said the political will is there, with Asias leaders having expressed support toward a vision of an integrated Asian economy.
Closing the development gap, however, between the relatively developed and the less-developed countries is very important, and regional cooperation in the areas of infrastructure, trade or investment could all contribute to narrowing such a gap, he said.
Kawai said the goal of the 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to have a common-market type "ASEAN economic community" by 2015 falls short of the European Union standard because "free mobility of labor may not be completely there and free movement of capital and money may not be in place."
Aside from trade in goods, the agreement also calls for free trade in services.
A European-type common market is "perhaps still further in the future, beyond even after 2020," he added.
Kawai said domestic economic issues make up a key impediment to a common Asian market. It would be "very difficult for them to fully open up their markets."
He said countries like China, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam must resolve these problems, otherwise it would be very difficult for them to fully open up their markets.
The leaders of Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam, meeting in the Philippines in December to launch an ASEAN Economic Community by 2015, have "crucial issues they need to address and resolve for this vision to materially move forward," Kawai said.
"They need to clearly define what they mean by ASEAN economic community and what constitutes the ASEAN economic community," he said. AFP
The Manila-based lender said 183 free trade agreements have either been signed or are being proposed or negotiated across Asia, where the share of intra-regional trade has risen to about 55 percent last year from some 40 percent in the early 1990s.
"Given the stalled Doha round of the World Trade Organization talks, it is vital for all Asian countries to continue their efforts to pursue further market opening and structural reforms," said Masahiro Kawai, head of the ADBs regional economic integration office.
He said the ultimate goal should be "consolidating the (various inter-Asian) FTAs (free trade agreements) into a single Asia-wide, best practices FTA," ensuring the expansion of free trade within the region.
Kawai said the political will is there, with Asias leaders having expressed support toward a vision of an integrated Asian economy.
Closing the development gap, however, between the relatively developed and the less-developed countries is very important, and regional cooperation in the areas of infrastructure, trade or investment could all contribute to narrowing such a gap, he said.
Kawai said the goal of the 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to have a common-market type "ASEAN economic community" by 2015 falls short of the European Union standard because "free mobility of labor may not be completely there and free movement of capital and money may not be in place."
Aside from trade in goods, the agreement also calls for free trade in services.
A European-type common market is "perhaps still further in the future, beyond even after 2020," he added.
Kawai said domestic economic issues make up a key impediment to a common Asian market. It would be "very difficult for them to fully open up their markets."
He said countries like China, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam must resolve these problems, otherwise it would be very difficult for them to fully open up their markets.
The leaders of Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam, meeting in the Philippines in December to launch an ASEAN Economic Community by 2015, have "crucial issues they need to address and resolve for this vision to materially move forward," Kawai said.
"They need to clearly define what they mean by ASEAN economic community and what constitutes the ASEAN economic community," he said. AFP
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