SIEM REAP, Cambodia (AFP)
— Sixteen nations home to roughly half the
world's population have agreed "in principle" to create a free trade
area spanning Asia, the secretary-general of ASEAN said Friday.
Trade
ministers from the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations
(ASEAN) and their counterparts from China, Japan, South Korea, India,
Australia and New Zealand will press their leaders to start talks on the
trade zone at a regional summit in November, Surin Pitsuwan told AFP.
The
move towards establishing the Regional Comprehensive Economic
Partnership (RCEP), made during a meeting in the Cambodian tourist town
of Siem Reap on Thursday, was hailed by Surin as "a big achievement".
The
proposal could transform the region -- containing around 3.5 billion
people -- into an integrated market with a combined Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) of $23 trillion, a third of the world's current annual
GDP, he said.
ASEAN -- which groups Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia,
Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and
Vietnam -- already has five separate free trade agreements (FTAs)
governing economic cooperation with the six partner countries.
"This
idea of trying to string together all these FTAs in existence into one,
in principle now it's been agreed," Surin said on the final day of a
week-long gathering of ASEAN economic ministers.
The pact will aim
to eliminate trade barriers, create a liberal investment environment
and protect intellectual property rights, according to the negotiation
guidelines.
"This is a bold move to deepen integration in the most
dynamic region in the world," New Zealand Trade Minister Tim Groser
said in a statement on his government's website.
"It shows that despite the economic difficulties in other parts of the world, Asia is actively pursuing trade liberalisation."
Progress
on the proposed RCEP trade deal, where China will be a dominant power,
comes as the United States is leading a push to create a vast
trans-Pacific pact with at least 10 other economies, including four
ASEAN members.
The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) has emerged as a
trade priority for US President Barack Obama, who has cast the mooted
pact as a way to boost US exports and jobs while preserving labor and
environmental standards.
US Trade Representative Ron Kirk, who
attended this week's trade talks in Cambodia, said there was room for
both trade initiatives.
"We seem them as complementary, not necessarily competition," he told reporters.
3 comments:
All Khmer descents have the right to serve the country of our ancestor Cambodia, included Oversea Khmer, Khmer in Thailand-Mekong Delta.
Sure Mr Surin Pitsuwan, you are one of us, you are welcome to joint us to save our country from the foreigner ennemy ?
Oversea khmers are alway considered themselves as khmer and willing to do anything to make Cambodia again "the pearl of Asia".
Cambodia again will dominate the world as a great country that why our neighbour keep encroaching on our borders. Work and study hard, Stop not till our goal is reached.
I agreed with you all khmers will one day be jointed together and be a great nation
again.I agreed with you that all khmer's Decendants still loved Cambodia,wanted to help but Cpp- Yuon were obstacle for their return home.
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