The Southeast Asian region, with an estimated
population of 600 million, is anticipated to join the ranks of China and India
as a major economic growth force in Asia should its constituent countries
succeed in integrating their economies by 2015.
If the
integration of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) is
implemented as planned, trading of goods, inter-country investments and labour
mobility within the region will become much easier, said Changyong Rhee, chief
economist of the Asian Development Bank (ADB).
This
will significantly reduce the cost of production for the businesses and economic
growth of member-countries and of the entire region will accelerate, said the
ADB’s top economist.
With
this favorable scenario, Southeast Asia will become more attractive to
investors and thus corner more direct investments from multinational companies
from outside the region, he said.
"A
new growth force is coming in Asia,” Rhee told a press conference on the
sidelines of the 45th annual meeting of the ADB board of governors that is
being hosted this year by the Philippines.
The 10
countries of Southeast Asia, which together make up the geopolitical and
economic organisation called Asean, are Singapore, Indonesia, Vietnam,
Malaysia, Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, Brunei, Myanmar and the Philippines.
Integration by 2015
The
Asean—established on Aug. 8, 1967, in Bangkok, by the five founding members
composed of Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand—aims
at achieving full economic integration by 2015, creating a single market and
production base that will allow the free flow of goods, services, investment,
capital and labour throughout the region.
Under
the Asean integration plan, tariffs on most goods coming from member-countries
will be brought down to zero or near-zero, their financial systems will be
integrated, and employment restrictions will be eased so that Southeast Asians
would find it easy to find jobs in any country within the region.
Once
Asean integration is completed, the region will be able to corner more foreign
direct investments, which now mostly go to China and India, said Rhee.
China
and India are currently leading growth in Asia and the world, with gross
domestic products expanding between 8 and 10 per cent over the past few years.
Southeast Asian countries are also exhibiting decent growth rates, but at a slower
pace.
With
integration, growth rates of Southeast Asian countries would be expected to be
faster, initially inching closer to and eventually matching those of China and
India.
Territorial disputes
Some
economists and social science experts, however, believe that Asean integration
could be derailed if the ongoing conflicts among some Asean members with China
over ownership of territories on the West Philippine Sea (South China Sea) is
not resolved soon.
Asean
members Vietnam, Brunei, Malaysia and the Philippines are claiming ownership in
whole or in part of the resource-rich Spratly archipelago, which is also
claimed by China and Taiwan.
China
and the Philippines are currently facing off at Panatag Island (Scarborough
Shoal), which the Philippines says is not in the disputed Spratlys but is well
within its 200-mile economic zone, but which China also claims for its own.
Yu
Yongding, a professor from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and one of
the Chinese delegates to the ADB event, said it would be difficult to implement
Asean integration if the geopolitical conflict is left unresolved.
Economic
Planning Secretary Cayetano Paderanga Jr. agreed with Yu, although he expressed
optimism that Asian policymakers will be able to resolve the conflict soon.
3
characteristics of growth
While
Asia remains a potential global growth driver, ADB president Haruhiko Kuroda
said Asian countries have to expand their goal from merely sustaining healthy
economic growth rates to having an economic growth that is “inclusive,” “green”
and “knowledge-based”.
Growth
must be inclusive, meaning it should benefit not only the middle class and the
rich but also the poor, Kuroda said.
Kuroda
noted that while many Asian countries have been experiencing decent growth rates,
their expanding economies have so far failed to significantly bring down
poverty levels.
In the
case of the Philippines, for instance, the country has managed to continually
grow despite the global economic crisis, but its poverty incidence remains high,
at 26.5 per cent as of end-2009.
"There
are still hundreds of millions of Asians living on $1.25 a day,” Kuroda said in
remarks at the opening session of the ADB governors’ meeting.
Some of
the proposals raised to reduce poverty include heavier investments in public
education and more lending to micro enterprises.
Green,
knowledge-based.
Kuroda
said economic growth must be “green,” that is, the rise in incomes must not
come at the expense of environmental degradation.
Economic
growth will not be sustainable if environmental conditions continue to
deteriorate, he said.
Lastly,
growth must be knowledge-based, meaning enterprises must invest in research and
development and in technology to help accelerate the growth of production,
Kuroda said.
He
echoed statements made by other economists at the meeting that more extensive
use of technology is necessary for emerging Asian economies like the
Philippines to escape the middle-income trap and graduate to becoming an
advanced economy.
Michelle
V. Remo
Philippine
Daily Inquirer
Business & Investment Opportunities
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