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First APEC Finance Ministers
Meeting JOINT MINISTERIAL STATEMENT For the first time, APEC Finance Ministers have met to discuss some of the fundamental economic challenges facing the AsiaPacific region: sustaining growth with low inflation, financing investment and infrastructure development, and promoting capital market development. This meeting was convened at the request of the APEC Leaders at their Seattle meeting in November 1993. The discussions were conducted on the basis of cooperation, consensus, and collegiality. We recognize the growing significance of overall regional economic performance to each member's economic well-being and to the health of the global economy. Ours is a region increasingly bound together by growing trade and investment ties. We agree that the following principles should guide our policy formation as we move toward the next century: Sound macroeconomic policies and stability should remain a pillar of
sustained, low-inflation growth in the region. Improving the capacity to finance infrastructure development is necessary
to address current shortages and inefficiencies. Mobilizing the capital needed to finance high levels of private investment and infrastructure development presents a formidable challenge for the region. Large and growing inflows from external sources have been, and will continue to be, crucial. Capital inflows augment domestic savings, help diversify sources of financing, reduce the cost of capital, and assist in capital market development. We will pursue policies which promote ongoing large and diversified inflows
of foreign direct investment. Such flows have already made a significant
contribution to accelerating growth. We will consult on efforts to develop and deepen banking sectors and
domestic securities markets, including through effective supervision and
regulation. We recognize the need for public resources to provide for funding for
sustainable development projects where private funding is not available.
We therefore look forward to the imminent conclusion of negotiations for
a General Capital Increase of the Asian Development Bank which will embody
a forward looking vision for the Bank and double its capital resources.
We believe that our discussions today have promoted greater understanding of key economic challenges facing the region. We therefore look forward to meeting again next year to consult on specific issues as well as regional economic developments, economic growth strategies, other macroeconomic objectives, regional capital flows, and financial sector developments and policies. We ask our deputies to undertake preparations for this meeting. We also ask our deputies and their central bank counterparts to meet jointly in late 1994 or early 1995 to discuss macroeconomic developments and in particular issues relating to the sustainability and management of the capital flows that are important for growth. To support that joint meeting, an ad hoc group of senior financial officials will meet to identify key factors and developments which the deputies and their central bank counterparts should address. We believe that improvements in information flows, availability, and exchanges can contribute importantly to efforts to mobilize financing and develop capital markets. We therefore call for cooperation in these efforts in undertaking the work and consultations proposed below. Study of Regional Portfolio Flows: We ask the IMF, working with exisiting
databases in cooperation with the World Bank, IFC and ADB, to prepare
a study of cross-border portfolio flows into and within the region, providing
quantitative measurements of the sources and destinations, as well as
the contribution of external flows to total capital mobilized in securities
markets. The study should be completed by the time of the meeting of APEC
finance ministers' deputies and their central bank counterparts. |
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© 亞太經合組織2001年會議中國籌委會秘書處
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