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Asian Mega-Trade Bloc Discussed at Ministerial Talks
KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 24, 2006 (AFP) - Southeast
Asian trade ministers met Thursday with counterparts from China,
India, Japan and South Korea to discuss a proposed giant free-trade
zone, and thrash out a web of free-trade deals. Association of
Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) members this week agreed to study
Japan's proposal for a 16-nation trade bloc which will embrace half
the world's population. However, ASEAN's secretary-general Ong Keng
Yong said regional nations were cautious about the idea to integrate
the economies of the 16 members of the newly created East Asia
Summit. "Many of the ministers have not yet got a sharp sense of how
the leaders would like to move the East Asia Summit," Ong told AFP.
"Are we just going to see a brain-storming strategic forum among the
leaders every year, or are the leaders now prepared to move to do
something more concrete, like this idea of an FTA," he said. ASEAN
ministers have also said they want to finish free-trade agreements (FTAs)
they are forging with their dialogue partners, including Japan, and
Ong said they were keen to avoid distractions. "Any related
initiative that can draw attention away, or can draw resources away
would be troublesome for our respective countries," he said. South
Korea's Trade Minister Kim Hyun Chong said Thursday his country was
open to Japan's proposal but echoed ASEAN's caution. "We are
receptive to open regionalism and that's why we are an active member
of APEC for instance," he told AFP, referring to the Asia-Pacific
Economic Cooperation forum. "I think we are going to have to
approach this rather carefully." Ong said China held a similar
wait-and-see view of the new trade bloc, which would take in the
10-member ASEAN plus China, Japan, South Korea, Australia, New
Zealand and India. "They are not yet sure how to proceed. It doesn't
mean they don't agree with it. Because at the end of the day, any
FTA will benefit China because they are now producing so much
manufactured goods and agricultural products," he said. Japan's
proposal comes just as ASEAN wades through complicated negotiations
related to trade pacts it has signed with China and South Korea, and
the one it is negotiating with Australia and New Zealand. Topping
the agenda are attempts to free up trade in services, which would
ultimately allow the free movement of workers between countries,
raising sensitive immigration and labour issues, Ong said. The ASEAN
chief said these talks would be "long and drawn-out." "You can go
and establish a company anywhere in the country that has signed an
agreement with us and the executives working for the company can
just go in and out," he told AFP. "If we can sort this one out, it's
basically a free movement of people already. So that's why it's not
easy to do these negotiations." Other hurdles facing ASEAN include
differences with Japan over the shape of their FTA, and stalled
talks with India which has been criticised for declining to cut
tariffs on a long list of mostly agricultural imports. Thailand has
also opted out of an FTA deal that ASEAN and South Korea signed in
May due to objections to Seoul's barriers on farm products,
including its rice sector. Kim said South Korean and Thai officials
were trying to conclude negotiations, although he told reporters
that officials "would have to work very hard to overcome some of
these sensitivities." ey/sls/lh
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