PM proposes
Pan-Asian free trade are
Posted AtOutlookIndia.com
Jaishree Balasubramanian and K R Sudhaman,
Kuala Lumpur, Dec 12 (PTI) Prime Minister Manmohan Singh
today mooted a Pan-Asian Free Trade Area, along the
lines of North American Free Trade Area and the European
Union, as part of efforts to make the Asian region an
economic power house.
"I believe the objective basis for the economies of
our region to come together exists. The subjective desire
to create an East Asian Community, bringing together
ASEAN, China, Japan, Korea, and also Australia and New
Zealand, is manifest. Like the North American Free Trade
Area, and the expanding European Union, a Pan-Asian
FTA will be a dynamic, open and inclusive association
of the countries of our region," he said.
"I am convinced this is the only way to move forward"
even though there will be sceptics and it may not be
easy. But for believers it is eminently possible," Singh
told the Asean Business Advisory Council's special leaders
dialogue with the theme India-Partnering with ASEAN
for Mutual Prosperity and Shared Interests.
The Prime Minister said the challenges today were to
create and maintain a regional and international environment
that enables us to attain and sustain high rates of
economic growth.
"We must create opportunities for entrepreneurship to
flourish not only locally, but also regionally and globally.
Economic activity cannot be confined to national borders;
it must be channelized to fuel growth in each other's
countries," he told the business leaders.
Regional trading arrangements have become important
building blocks of multilateralism in an increasingly
globalized world, he noted.
"Therefore, we seek closer economic interaction with
ASEAN. We are committed to bringing down our tariffs
to levels prevalent in ASEAN countries, to dismantle
unwarranted barriers and to expand global capital flows.
We must walk this road together, so that enterprises
in our countries find it a beneficial process, not a
hurtful one," he said.
"There may be losers, and there will certainly be gainers,
but on the whole, we will obtain a win-win outcome,"
the Prime Minister said.
Observing that India is a vibrant marketplace, he said
businesses from abroad, including from ASEAN, Japan
and the Republic of Korea, find India a productive and
profitable business destination.
Pointing out to China, he said the gathering momentum
of India-China relations is visible in the expansion
of our bilateral economic ties.
The Prime Minister noted that the process of engagement
in the Asian region had truly taken off. "I am confident
it will be self-sustaining, enhancing direct contact
between peoples of the region," he said adding India's
share in the global flows of goods, services, knowledge
and culture had grown exponentially in the past decade.
"Today, our external economic profile is robust and
reassuring to investors, at home and abroad. After registering
an 8 per cent rate of growth in 2003-2004, our economy
recorded upwards of 7.0 per cent growth for two years
in a row. Indeed, in the first half of 2005-06, we have
touched 8.0 per cent," he said.
"In the past year and a half, our policies relating
to investment, taxation, foreign trade, FDI, banking,
finance and capital markets have evolved to make Indian
industry and enterprise more competitive globally.
We have launched a massive program for rural renewal
which will upgrade rural infrastructure and incomes
and thereby expand the domestic market. New policies
are enabling public-private partnership in the modernisation
of roads, railways, ports, airports, power and urban
infrastructure," he told the audience.
Singh pointed out that India had concluded a Framework
Agreement on Comprehensive Economic Cooperation with
ASEAN in 2003 and with Singapore more recently.
"A similar model is being developed with Thailand, and
India is also setting up a Joint Study Group for conclusion
of Free Trade Agreements with Malaysia, Indonesia, Japan
and the Repub lic of Korea.
"We are also examining ways to develop regional trading
arrangements with China. These are all milestones on
the road to the eventual creation of an Asian Economic
Community," he said.
The Prime Minister said the East Asian Community was
a natural extension of the ASEAN-India engagement process.
"The India-ASEAN Free Trade Agreement can become the
first step in the process. The limited FTA is a beginning
but we must ensure that it leads to explosive growth
in trade and investment".
He said the essence of the idea was to build up closer
linkages amongst India and the countries of the ASEAN.
"The key to the future is the development of synergies.
In the 1960s, synergies between scientists in India
and scientists at the International Rice Research Institute
in the Philippines contributed to the Green Revolution
in India. This resulted in filling India's granaries
with foodgrains. We have both benefited from each other,
he said.
The Prime Minister said India has now developed expertise
in high technology areas such as IT, space, bio-technology
and pharmaceuticals. "We are ready to share our skills
in these sectors with our partners in ASEAN and other
developing countries. Each of these sectors presents
its own opportunities for India-ASEAN cooperation."
With the growing recognition of complementary strengths,
he said India is developing increasing links to ASEAN
and East Asian production networks. These links relate
to the knowledge intensive segments of the value chain.
They include software development, R&D, engineering
and designing and high quality manufacturing, and are
invaluable to the process of integration.
"The ASEAN region has an abundance of natural resources
and significant technological skills. These provide
a natural base for the growth of synergies and integration
between ASEAN and India - in both trade and investment.
I believe we can double the present level of bilateral
trade by 2007, reaching a target of US 30 billion dollars
by then," he added.
December 12, 2005 |