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WSWS : News
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ASEAN makes tentative moves toward an East Asian economic
bloc
By Peter Symonds
30 November 2000
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At an Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) meeting
in Singapore last weekend, regional leaders along with their counterparts
from three north-east Asian countriesJapan, China and South
Koreatook tentative steps toward the formation of an East
Asian trade bloc.
A study group of government officials from the 13 Asian nations
will be established to examine two proposals: firstly, the establishment
of a formal East Asian summit meeting to replace the existing
informal ASEAN+3 meetings, and secondly, the setting up of a regional
free trade and investment area. The group is to report back in
12 months.
Proposals were put forward for a $2 billion rail line from
Singapore to Kunming in China's Yunnan Province to improve transport
ties between ASEAN members and for high-speed Internet links between
major regional cities, including Kuala Lumpur, Singapore, Bangkok,
Tokyo, Seoul and Shanghai. Japan has promised to foot much of
the $15 billion bill for the Internet upgrade, to be known as
e-ASEAN.
Singapore's Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong, who hosted the talks,
underscored concerns in ASEAN that a broader grouping would be
dominated by the north-east Asian economies. Until ASEAN
is strong enough I think we should not move too quickly into that
kind of a grouping because there is a danger that ASEAN may be
eclipsed, he said.
ASEAN, set up in 1967 amid the escalating US military intervention
in Vietnam, initially comprised Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore,
Thailand, Brunei and the Philippines. Following the end of the
Cold War, it has expanded in the 1990s to include the three Indochinese
statesVietnam, Laos and Cambodiaas well as Burma.
But the combined Gross Domestic Product of the 10 members amounts
to about $US500 billion, only slightly higher than South Korea
and far less than China or Japan.
Goh was defensive about the move toward a trade bloc, saying:
I don't see why we should not [do this] because North Americans
compete as such a groupthey have NAFTA. He emphasised:
This is not, I repeat, an attempt to shut Washington from
East Asia. Goh's assurances to Washington reflect fears
that any new Asian economic grouping could provoke US retaliation.
All of the East Asian countries rely on high levels of exports
into the US market.
The formation of an East Asian economic bloc has been on the
agenda for more than a decade. Japan, concerned at the moves by
its US and European rivals to consolidate free trade blocs, initiated
behind-the-scenes discussion on the idea in the late 1980s. But
Japanese governments were reluctant to openly campaign for an
Asian grouping. They feared an adverse US reaction, and were conscious
of painful memories throughout the region of Japan's wartime role
and its Greater Asian Co-prosperity Sphere.
Australian Prime Minister Bob Hawke first mooted an Asia-Pacific
economic co-operation forum in 1989, after top-level
talks in Tokyo. Significantly, the initial proposal did not include
the US. But Washington insisted on attending the first meeting
in Canberra of what became the Asia Pacific Economic Co-operation
(APEC) forum, effectively neutralising its original East Asian
focus.
In the early 1990s, Malaysia's Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad,
backed by sections of Japanese big business, pushed for the formation
of an alternative East Asia Economic Caucus, excluding not only
the US but Australia and New Zealand as well. The plan was effectively
shelved as a result of US opposition, however.
As for APEC, with both Japan and the US involved, it has been
little more than a ceremonial get-together of an increasing number
of countries. Its most recent meeting, held in Brunei just before
the ASEAN meeting, was preoccupied with restarting trade talks
within the framework of the World Trade Organisation, but little
progress was made. Singapore's Senior Minister Lee Kuan Yew commented
at a dinner in Sydney last week that he felt APEC had lost its
focus.
Asian financial crisis
The latest moves towards closer East Asian ties have been sparked
by the 1997-98 Asian financial collapse, which has fueled political
and economic instability throughout the region. A brief examination
of the leaders present at last weekend's meeting is enough to
undercut claims by some media commentators that the Asian
tigers have recovered from the economic crisis.
Japanese Prime Minister Mori has just only just survived a
parliamentary no-confidence motion and is presiding over an economy
that has barely responded to huge financial stimulus packages
aimed at boosting growth. Philippine President Joseph Estrada
has been impeached over alleged bribe-taking and the only factor
holding up the value of shares and the peso appears to be the
likelihood that he will soon be out of office.
Thai Prime Minister Chuan Leekpai is behind in the polls in
the lead-up to next January's national elections, Indonesian President
Abdurrahman Wahid is embroiled in scandals and threats of impeachment...
and the list could go on.
While economic growth rates have improved from the disastrous
negative levels of 1998, share and currency values have declined
sharply in a number of Asian countries this year. More fundamentally,
none of the underlying problems bound up with huge levels of bad
debt and the fragility of the financial sector have been overcome.
The recovery that has taken place has been largely dependent on
a combination of government spending and high levels of exports,
particularly to the US.
Most ASEAN members are suffering as a result of higher oil
prices, and prices for their electronic exports are falling. Overall
foreign investment in ASEAN countries has contracted from $21.5
billion in 1997 to $19.6 billion in 1998 and $13.1 billion last
year. According to one report, 60 percent of investment in so-called
developing economies in Asia this year went to China and that
percentage could increase after China's entry into the World Trade
Organisation.
Fearing its growing irrelevance, ASEAN initiated closer links
with Japan, China and South Korea through informal
ASEAN+3 meetings. The grouping was brought together in part by
mutual resentment of the aggressive intervention by the US and
the International Monetary Fund (IMF) during the Asian financial
meltdown. Washington seized on the opportunity to insist that
countries like Indonesia and South Korea open up their markets
and investment opportunities. The US and the European Union opposed
Japan's offer at the time to establish an Asian Monetary Fund.
While the latest ASEAN meeting discussed the possibility of
closer collaboration, sharp conflicts exist, reflecting the disparate
nature of the member states and their relationship to the world
economy.
Differences have emerged over a plan to substantially lower
tariffs in the ASEAN Free Trade Area (AFTA) on a range of more
than 9,000 manufactured and agricultural products. The six ASEAN
founding membersThailand, Malaysia, Brunei, Singapore, the
Philippines and Malaysiahave to 2002 to comply, while the
others have longer. In May, Malaysia demanded a three-year period
of grace for lowering tariffs on auto imports, provoking tensions
with Thailand, which is a major regional auto producer.
At last weekend's meeting, Malaysia and Singapore came to blows
over Singapore's decision to pursue individual bilateral trade
agreements outside ASEAN's auspices. It has already signed a deal
with New Zealand, has others under discussion with Australia,
Japan and the US, and is studying links with Mexico and Canada.
Singapore Prime Minister Goh hit back at criticism from an unnamed
Malaysian minister by saying that Kuala Lumpur was exploring a
similar deal with Japana claim that Malaysian Prime Minister
Mahathir promptly denied.
But the most telling sign of the underlying tensions was an
extraordinary outburst by Indonesian President Wahid against Singapore.
After Lee Kuan Yew ruled out Indonesia's calls for East Timor
and Papua New Guinea to be included in ASEAN, Wahid threatened
to set up his own West Pacific Forum and launched
into a tirade against Singapore at a meeting at the Indonesian
embassy.
Wahid accused Singapore of only looking to reap profits
from its relations with its neighbours, of failing to tell
Indonesia about defence arrangements with Australia and New Zealand,
and of having racist attitudes towards its Malay minority. He
praised Mahathir for being the only person who has been
critical of Singapore, adding that Mahathir has a
new friend. He went so far as to suggest that Indonesia
and Malaysia teach it [Singapore] a lesson by cutting
off water supplies to the island state.
The bitterness of Wahid's attack, which panders to anti-Chinese
sentiment in Indonesia, reflects both his political weakness at
home and the sharpness of the tensions underlying ASEAN, even
as it attempts to establish closer regional economic cooperation.
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