Keynote Address of Ambassador Serbini Ali,
Executive Director of APEC Secretariat
At
Seminar on challenges and opportunities in Asia-Pacific
Gedung Cakara Loka
Jakarta Selatan, Indonesia
10 October 2000
Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen
Introduction
It is good to be back here in the Republic of Indonesia where Bogor
goals to further the vision for a community through economic growth,
strengthened cooperation and improved standards of living were born.
Though the goals remain the same, the process of achieving them
has been somewhat influenced by new developments.
The phenomenal advances in information and communication technology
change the way business is done and the way we live and work. Globalisation
exposes international organizations as well as governments’ lack
of appropriate policies and institutional frameworks to address
these new challenges. The ongoing globalisation process forces us
to develop new national and global-wide practices and policies in
order to encourage and facilitate the free flow of information,
goods, services, investments and capitals.
What does APEC do in facing all these challenges?
Trade and Investment Liberalization and Facilitation
APEC’s ambition of promoting economic growth and improving people’s
living standards remains the backbone of APEC’s cooperation and
that is now being met by the challenges of the post Asian financial
crisis and the new economy. That vision is even more important now
that technology and Internet bring news, information, knowledge
and innovation faster than we ever thought before.
In Auckland, APEC Leaders stressed that open and competitive markets
are key drivers of economic efficiency and consumer welfare. They
are committed to strengthen markets by providing greater transparency
in corporate and public sector governance, enhancing the role of
competition to improve efficiency and broaden participation by enterprises,
improving quality regulation and capacity of regulators, reducing
compliance costs and facilitating business growth, and building
favourable regional and international environment for free and fair
competition. Following last year’s ministerial decision, a Workshop
on public sector management was held in May. That workshop was aimed
to enhance the capability of APEC economies to address public sector
governance issues.
In the face of all the new developments, APEC’s cooperation on
strengthening markets has been extended to e-commerce and technology
cooperation, entrepreneurship and SME development, education and
life-long learning and social safety nets. Ministers will receive
reports on the implementation of the Road Map Initiatives in November
including cooperation on strengthening of legal infrastructures
for business.
Turning to the WTO, APEC Leaders remain committed to supporting
the WTO and the launching of a new round of trade negotiations.
APEC monitors the development of negotiations within the WTO. Recently
in Darwin, APEC Ministers for Trade endorsed the Japanese proposal
that was aimed to develop confidence-building measures for the WTO
and help developing member economies implement WTO agreements.
In the area of economic and technical cooperation, APEC pursues
cooperation that help member economies to attain sustainable growth
and equitable development through policy dialogue, as well as joint
activities to broaden and deepen intra-regional cooperation in areas
of mutual interest to the APEC member economies.
Those joint activities include compilation and sharing of data
and information, surveys, training, seminars, research and technical
demonstrations that would improve economic and social well-being
and facilitate growth of trade and investment in the region. Such
activities are being conducted in various areas, including WTO-related
areas like services, standards, intellectual property, customs valuation,
and rules of origin, investment, competition policy, and government
procurement and dispute settlement.
APEC success is a challenge in itself. It now has about 250 project
activities proliferating across the board. It has 10 Working Groups
and may have a couple of new ones by end of the year. At the same
time, APEC has been reviewing its already extensive process and
how to streamline its organization. The extensive numbers of meetings
and activities across the board call for more coordination and coherence
in APEC activities. As Brunei inherited one of the largest build-in
agenda from last year’s leaders’ meeting, Brunei wants to see this
year as year for implementation. The electronic Economic and Technical
Cooperation Clearing-House, which will be launched in November is
a powerful tool that enables users to monitor project implementation
and has electronic notice-board capability. We believe this is very
useful for planners and academics, who are interested in APEC activities.
APEC’s success invites curiosity and applicants. The current 10-year
moratorium on membership will ends in 2007 and this meantime allows
APEC to consolidate its process. APEC’s policy on transparency and
admission of guests at working group levels addresses concern that
APEC is an exclusive club.
New Challenge: New Economy
Going into the 21st Century, economies of the Asia-Pacific region
are facing a new and demanding environment, which will be largely
influenced by three inter-related characteristics:
Rapid economic and structural change as economies take up the opportunities
from open trade and investment;
Rapid innovation in information and communication technology, and
widespread adoption of these technologies in all forms of economic
life; and
A rapidly growing trend towards greater intensity of knowledge in
almost all occupations.
Key factors which underlying this new environment provide clear
signal- the key fruits of future economic success will depend very
much on the capacity of people to acquire and use knowledge and
on their ability to cope with change.
The new economy underscores the importance of knowledge as a key
driver of future economic growth. APEC Education Ministers who met
in Singapore last May agreed that high quality education services
should be widely available and widely used if APEC members want
to embrace knowledge-based economy. Furthermore, APEC identifies
that advanced communications networks and policy/regulatory frameworks
that encourage competition, innovation and entrepreneurship are
important.
Brunei Darussalam, as host, has placed high priority on Human Resources
Development along with Information and Communication Technology
and Small and Medium Enterprises as strand running through the APEC
2000 theme and to address these agenda with a real sense of purpose
and in a way that will bring in the business sector and key institutions.
While the governments’ roles are to provide policy frameworks and
structural policy measures that include competition and deregulation
policies, trade and investment liberalization, education and basic
research, infrastructure, corporate laws, intellectual property
rights, taxation and consumer protection, the new economy is very
much driven by the private sector.
Key features that set APEC apart from other international organizations
are its commitment to facilitating business and regularly bringing
the business/private sector into a wide range of APEC activities.
Business expertise and resources can help APEC achieve its objectives
more so in this new economy. Business already participates in many
of APEC’s working groups and helps shape the policy dialogue in
partnership with member economy officials. APEC new web-portal for
business is already getting wider attention and APEC’s publication
– getting results for business has been made be available on-line.
APEC electronic-Individual Action Plan will be launched in November
and its full version is due for completion by 2001. All these are
useful for business.
More than ninety percent of APEC entrepreneurs are made up of small
and medium enterprises. They contribute no less than sixty percent
of each member’s GNP and provide more than eighty percent employment.
APEC is committed to facilitate growth of its SMEs. APEC is now
encouraging SMEs to take up IT challenge in the face of globalisation,
recognizing the internet’s potential to help SMEs offer their products
and services cost effectively and globally.
APEC has demonstrated global leadership through E-Commerce Readiness
Initiative, APEC was the first multilateral forum to develop a comprehensive
Electronic Commerce Readiness Guide. This Guide has been a tool
to examine how economies can develop economic growth strategies
for global digital economy. The Initiative was endorsed and supported
by APEC key stakeholders and APEC Trade Ministers in Darwin last
June called on all economies to participate. At the Okinawa Summit,
the G-8 announced a readiness approach for developing countries
that builds on APEC’s works.
Delivering to the community
Let me turn to this year’s agenda and priority. In choosing the
theme, Brunei Darussalam considers the following factors. The theme
is chosen after giving a high priority on continuity, thus allowing
APEC to build on previous works. It enables APEC to become innovative
and forward looking. Finally, APEC should respond to calls for more
coordination and coherence in APEC activities.
Building stronger foundation is one of the sub-themes of APEC 2000.
Opportunities brought about by the technology innovation could not
be reaped if APEC members do not have access to the technology and
its human capacity unmatched the developments. Brunei has an opportunity
to make a difference.
As Chair, Brunei wants APEC to facilitate all segments of society
having access to information technology and skills. This year’s
work on human resource development is aimed at developing a clearer
operational medium-term plan, which among other things is intended
to expand opportunities for all to become participants in and benefit
from the new economy. By helping to strengthen the institutional
capacity of its developing member economies and by promoting long-term
sustainable economic growth, APEC is making valuable contribution
by creating jobs and raising the living standards of the people
of the region.
I think it would be fair if I do not mention the role of women
in APEC process. This year Brunei hosted Women Business Leaders
Network Meeting that ended with some concrete recommendations to
the Ministers of Small and Medium Enterprises. China has agreed
to host similar meeting next year. Women have important roles especially
in the development of SMEs. This year too APEC youths have a chance
to display their arts exhibitions to our Leaders and would have
a chance to interact with their leaders. All these mean to getting
them recognized and involve in APEC process. It is also a mean to
benefit them.
Finally, let me conclude by saying that despite challenges brought
by new developments, opportunities are abundant for everyone to
play a part. The institutional capacity building in APEC, for example,
requires all stakeholders, governments, business and academia, to
work together if they want to make impact and tangible outcomes.
Thank you for listening.
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