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South East Asian summit seals free trade agreement with China
By John Roberts
20 December 2004
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The annual gathering of the Association of South East Asian
Nations (ASEAN) held last month in the Laotian capital of Vientiane
was dominated by the signing of a free trade deal with China.
The pact is expected to give a further significant impetus to
a trade relationship on which the 10 ASEAN members have become
increasingly dependent, particularly since the 1997-98 Asian financial
crisis.
Under the agreement, tariff and non-tariff barriers will be
systematically reduced and a mechanism set up to resolve disputes.
The six more economically advanced ASEAN membersIndonesia,
Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, the Philippines and Bruneiand
China will begin cutting tariffs on July 1 2005, with the aim
of reducing duties on 4,000 categories of goods to between five
percent and zero by 2010. Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia and Myanmar
will have until 2015 to comply with these targets.
The difficulty of dealing with varying levels of economic development
and different interests among ASEAN members has resulted in a
less ambitious plan for sensitive goods. Tariffs for
goods in these categories will not be reduced below 20 percent
until 2012. Iron, steel and petrochemicals are classified as sensitive
and each country is allowed to nominate up to 400 goods.
For the ASEAN ruling elites, there was little choice but to
accept Chinas offer of increased integration with its booming
economy. Since the 1997-98 financial collapse, China has attracted
the lions share of foreign investment at the expense of
its South East Asian neighbours. In 2001, China received 9 percent
of the worlds available foreign investmentfive times
the scant 1.7 percent attracted by ASEAN members. Over the last
decade, China has more than doubled its share of the worlds
manufactured exports to 5.3 percent.
While ASEAN countries have lost out to China in the competition
for investment funds, its economic expansion has created demands
of its own. With annual growth rates of 8 to 9 percent, Chinese
industry has an expanding need for raw materials, energy and manufactured
parts and has turned to South East Asia as one of its major sources.
Since 1995, Sino-ASEAN trade has risen by about 15 percent per
year. In the first nine months of 2004, it was worth $US75.45
billion and is expected to reach $US100 billion by years
endup 28 percent from $78.2 billion for 2003.
Malaysia, for instance, increased its exports to China seven-fold
between 1991 and 2002, and its imports six-fold. Half of Malaysias
exports consisted of electronic, electrical, chemical, machinery
and textile commodities as well as edible oils and grains.
ASEAN trade with China is rapidly overtaking trade with the
USworth an estimated $120 billionand with the European
Union$110 billion. Rising exports to China have been a major
factoras well as to Europe and the USin the revival
of the major ASEAN countries after the 1997-98 financial crisis.
By 2003, Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and the Philippines
accounted for 4.4 percent of the worlds manufactured exportsthe
same level as in 1994.
Financial analysts, however, speculate that ASEAN nations will
have to specialise in upmarket, high value-added products, such
as luxury automobiles, if trade relations with China are to continue
to expand.
In a press interview on December 3, Indonesias Trade
Minister Mari E. Pangestu explained that, in the area of textiles
and clothing, his country could not compete with China in low-end
products but had to attract investment to enter into brand-named
goods and other higher value-added products.
Pangestu made clear, however, that, despite the competition,
Indonesia had to integrate with the booming Chinese economy. We
can and must take full advantage of the increasing tendency of
East Asia to become a regional production centre where China is
the core. China becomes the centre due to its big exports and
big domestic market. The bottom line is we must take part in the
production network.
Beijings attitude was outlined in early November by Chinese
Vice-Premier Wu Yi at the China-ASEAN Exposition in Nanning. She
called for greater integration of the economies and for the promotion
of trade in high value added machinery and electronic products
as well as the expansion of trade in traditional goods. China
and ASEAN should team up. Only by doing so, can we grasp opportunities,
meet challenges ... and withstand the fierce competition on a
global basis, Wu said.
A balancing act
Washington reacted coolly to Beijings closer ties with
ASEAN, clearly regarding the trade deal as a threat to US domination
in the region. Citing US analysts, an article in the Washington
Post warned that the agreement shows how an increasingly
bold China is forging alliances that would reduce, and possibly
eventually challenge, Americas influence in Asia.
ASEAN was formed in 1967, in the wake of the bloody US-backed
coup in Indonesia, as a pro-US grouping directed primarily against
China. In the wake of the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991
and the end of the Cold War, ASEAN has focused on fostering regional
economic cooperation. Vietnam, Cambodia, Burma and Laos all joined
in the 1990s.
Well aware of the potential for US-China tensions to sharpen,
ASEAN leaders are involved in a cautious balancing act. Economic
opportunities are opening up in China but ASEAN members are still
heavily dependent on the US as an export market. The ASEAN economies,
with a combined GDP of around $US 700 billion or about half that
of China, are dwarfed by the US economy with its GDP of over $10
trillion.
In this light, the reaction of ASEAN leaders to the refusal
by Australian Prime Minister John Howard to sign the organisations
1976 Treaty of Amity and Friendship is significant. Howard was
invited, along with his New Zealand counterpart Helen Clark, to
the ASEAN meeting for the first time. The ASEAN leaders agreed
to begin talks with Australia over a free trade deal and were
clearly stunned by his refusal to sign the treaty. China, India,
Japan, Pakistan, South Korea, Russia and New Zealand have all
signed the treaty, which is largely cosmetic and commits these
nations to nothing.
Howard, however, has refused to renounce intervention in the
region, even formally. He has already provoked opposition in Asia
by announcing his own version of Washingtons doctrine of
preemptive strikes, declaring that his government will not hesitate
to act, with or without the approval of neighbouring countries,
to counter a so-called terrorist threat. On this basis, the Howard
government is already aggressively pursuing Australian economic
and strategic interestsfollowing up the Australian-led military
intervention in East Timor in 1999 with the political takeover
of the Solomon Islands in 2002 and the bullying of other small
Pacific Island countries.
In the past, ASEAN figures like former Malaysian Prime Minister
Mahathir Mohamed would not have hesitated to take Howard to task
for his brazen threats to national sovereignty. In the current
international political climate, the South East Asian leaders
were reluctant to challenge Canberra, when Howard was clearly
acting with Washingtons backing. Howard insisted that his
government had to retain the right to intervene directly into
the region, and no public criticisms were madea result that
was hailed by Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer as
a victory of Australian diplomacy.
Chinas close involvement with ASEAN is likely to heighten
tensions. The US has already indicated its opposition to Burma
taking over as the organisations chair when its turn comes
up in 2006. The Bush administration, which maintains economic
sanctions against Burma aimed at installing a more sympathetic
regime, is threatening to boycott any ASEAN related events if
Burma takes over. China on the other hand has maintained close
relations with Burma.
See Also:
Chinese capitalism:
industrial powerhouse or sweatshop of the world?
[31 January 2003]
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