The secretary- general of the United Nations Conference on Trade
and Development (UNCTAD) has called for Northeast Asian countries
to strengthen economic cooperation to foster prosperous regional
integration.
It will not only help promote economic development within the
countries, but also help them weather financial crises such as that
experienced by Southeast Asia in the late 1990s, said Supachai
Panitchpakdi, former director-general of the World Trade
Organization (WTO).
He was speaking at the Northeast Asia Economic Cooperation
Forum, which opened on Saturday in Changchun, capital of
northeastern Jilin Province.
Northeast Asia is performing brilliantly in trade, investment,
and development, and potential is bright for continuing regional
integration and poverty reduction. However, for such integration to
be effective, there is a need to deepen the cooperation, said
Supachai.
According to a UNCTAD report, the six countries of the region,
China, Russia, Japan, the Republic of Korea, the Democratic
People's Republic of Korea and Mongolia, account for 21 percent of
global exports and 16 percent of imports. Interregional trade
nearly doubled from 2000 to 2004 to US$320.7 billion, and over the
past five years the trade has accounted for almost 40 percent of
all Asian trade.
The region has plentiful natural resources such as gas, oil,
minerals, water and timber, which has made it a magnet for
investment, both global and regional.
Foreign direct investment soared from US$61 billion in 2000 to
US$88 billion in 2004.
However, despite increasing numbers of bilateral and
multilateral free trade agreements, Northeast Asia has lagged
behind for 30 years.
In terms of formal regional economic links it suffers an
"organization gap" compared with Europe, the Americas, Africa and
even the Gulf countries, said the secretary-general.
The governments of the countries need to implement a sound
investment policy regime, facilitate the cross-border movement of
goods and people and improve the macroeconomic and business
environment, said Supachai.
As an initial measure, the countries could focus on bringing
best practice standards to existing special economic and
development zones, he said.
In addition, Northeast Asian countries should address tariffs
and remove trade barriers to achieve substantial export gains,
according to Supachai, who added UNCTAD would like to provide
assistance on negotiating trade and investment agreements,
preparing for WTO accession and personnel training.
More than 500 officials and experts from the UN, the European
Union and Northeast Asian countries are meeting at the three-day
forum.
(China Daily September 4, 2006)