PHNOM PENH: Southeast Asian nations must redouble efforts to bridge development
gaps which threaten the region's efforts to create an EU-style single market,
Cambodia's prime minister said Monday.
Building an ASEAN economic
community by 2015 is the "top priority", Hun Sen said as he opened
the annual meeting of economic ministers from the Association of Southeast
Asian Nations in the Cambodian tourist hub of Siem Reap.
Emulating the European Union's
example, ASEAN wants to establish a single market and manufacturing base of
about 600 million people -- a goal that has been spurred by intensifying
competition from China and India.
With less than three years to go,
ASEAN must "address challenges and bridge the development gap, which
hinders the realisation of (the) ASEAN Economic Community as planned",
said Hun Sen, according to an official translation.
The development gap among ASEAN
nations "is still huge", he said. The bloc's 10 member states range
from deeply impoverished Myanmar to advanced city state Singapore and emerging
powerhouse Indonesia.
"This requires us to double
our efforts to promote further growth and improve equitable distribution of the
fruits of growth at both national and regional levels," Hun Sen said.
In a step towards narrowing the
gap between richer and poorer nations and achieving regional integration, the
bloc last year set up a nearly $500 million ASEAN infrastructure fund offering
loans to build roads, railways and other projects without direct foreign
assistance.
But according to Hun Sen, whose
country currently holds the ASEAN chair, the fund "is still very
small".
He urged the bloc's economic and
finance ministers "to attract more financing partners to increase the fund
size" by approaching dialogue partners such as Japan, China, South Korea.
ASEAN economies grew by 4.7
percent in 2011, Hun Sen said, despite the weak global economy, high oil prices
and volatile capital flows.
The figure was down from 7.6
percent growth in 2010, according to ASEAN data.
Despite a slowdown in exports,
ASEAN countries posted a combined trade surplus of more than $90 billion in
2011, Hun Sen said.
ASEAN groups Brunei, Cambodia,
Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and
Vietnam.
During their week-long meeting,
the economic ministers will also seek to deepen economic engagement in talks
with other nations including China, the United States, Russia and India.
The meeting marks the first
gathering of ASEAN members since a foreign ministers' meeting in July ended in
disarray over a maritime dispute in the South China Sea, exposing deep
divisions within the bloc.
AFP
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