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Japan, Southeast Asia Agree to Study Giant Asian Trade Bloc
by Elisia Yeo =(PICTURE)= ATTENTION - UPDATES ///
KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 23, 2006 (AFP) - Southeast
Asian and Japan agreed Wednesday to investigate establishing a giant
16-nation Asian trade bloc, but the two sides must first overcome a
wrangle over their own free-trade deal. Japan has proposed a massive
new trade zone embracing half the world's population, from the
10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) plus China,
Japan, South Korea, Australia, India and New Zealand. Despite the
lofty goal, Japan and Southeast Asia are embroiled in a row over the
shape of an ASEAN-Japan free-trade deal, with the region resisting
efforts to bundle together a series of individual agreements,
officials said. Japan is also reluctant to cave in to ASEAN demands
to invest in sensitive sectors such as forestry and fisheries. But
despite the dispute, ASEAN economic ministers meeting here agreed to
Japan's plan to carry out a study conducted by academics from the 16
nations into the prospects of an East Asia trade bloc. They also
welcomed Japan's proposal to put 10 billion yen (86 million dollars)
into setting up the Economic Research Institute, a regional trade
thinktank. Japan's Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry Toshihiro
Nikai said the new European-style trade zone would benefit from a
population of 3.0 billion people and current economic activity of
9.0 trillion dollars. "We are certain it will be to the benefit of
all the countries in this region," he said. But with many observers
saying such a trade bloc is decades away from reality, he added
there was "no need to make any haste" in pushing the integration of
the 16 nations which last year formed the East Asia Summit. The
talks Wednesday also covered the split in opinion over the
ASEAN-Japan free-trade agreement (FTA) which Malaysian Trade
Minister Rafidah Aziz said was the top priority. "The ASEAN
ministers agreed to the proposal to do the study but however we
reiterated that Japan and ASEAN should focus on the expeditious
conclusion of the ASEAN-Japan (trade deal) that is to us very
important. It can be the basis for a wider regional integration,"
she said. ASEAN secretary-general Ong Keng Yong said the grouping
wants Japan to offer a region-wide FTA, rather than "stringing
together" existing pacts forged with individual nations in the
grouping. Japan has signed bilateral FTAs with Malaysia, the
Philippines, Singapore and Thailand, and Ong said Tokyo wanted to
bundle those along with a possible deal with Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar
and Vietnam. "We believe it should not be intertwined," Rafidah
said. Nikai said the issue was "a challenge which is unprecedented
up to now". "This is a matter of how to reconcile the regional
agreement and the bilateral agreements," he said. One ASEAN official
told AFP that the bloc also wants Japan to invest in its forestry
sector -- important to Malaysia and Indonesia -- and fisheries
sector -- sensitive to Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam and Indonesia.
The official said that Japanese expertise would help invigorate
industry and provide employment for the region's vast population.
"For example, ASEAN wants to learn the business on how to can the
fish. And in forestry, we do not want Japan to just buy the logs but
to share its experience on producing the finished products," he said
on condition of anonymity. "But Japan's position is that it just
wants trade." ASEAN and Japan agreed in 2002 to work towards a
comprehensive economic partnership, including an FTA, and have
pledged to try to finish negotiations on the entire deal by
mid-2007. ey-jsm/sls/lh |