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BEIJING, April 22 -- Prospects of free trade in Asia
are promising as a dazzlingly complicated network of free trade deals is
expanding.
Nations on the continent have signed dozens of agreements about bilateral or multilateral free trade agreements (FTA) and they are in talks for more.
Asia's three biggest economies - China, Japan and the
Republic of Korea (ROK) are all in respective talks with the Association of
Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) about FTA.
What is more exciting is that the respective FTA
deals the three countries are involved in might end up in a trade bloc that
includes the three of them as well as ASEAN countries.
Experts mandated by governments earlier this week
have begun a study looking at the building of a free trade area that covers the
13 nations.
The FTA could be even bigger because both Australia
and New Zealand have expressed intentions to join FTA deals with the so-called
10 plus 3 countries.
South Asian countries have also signed a number of
FTA deals.
Between East Asia and South Asia, China and Pakistan
have started FTA negotiations; China and India also pledged to build a FTA.
However, there are still no signs that such an FTA
that covers China, Japan and the ROK could emerge any time soon.
As the biggest economies in the region, their close
economic ties would be very favourable for economic co-operation of the entire
region, said Xu Changwen, a senior researcher with the China Academy of
International Trade and Economic Co-operation, a think tank under the Ministry
of Commerce.
Both China and ROK are willing to build an FTA among
the three, but Japan has shown less commitment.
"Japan's attitude is the key. It does not intend to
have talks with China soon," said Jiang Ruiping, a professor at China Foreign
Affairs University.
"It (Japan) puts lots of emphasis on the fact that
China is a new member of the World Trade Organization (WTO). It wants to see how
well China can adjust to its WTO membership."
Openly, Japanese officials have also disclosed their
roadmap for their pursuit of free trade with regional trading partners.
Last year, they finished talks with Singapore. Now
they are in talks with ROK, some ASEAN countries individually and ASEAN as a
whole.
China seems to be at the very bottom of Japan's
namelist.
The benefits of a three-way FTA for Japan are obvious
because its enterprises are the strongest in the three countries. In fact,
Japanese enterprises lobbied very hard for it.
Zhao Jinping, a veteran Japan expert with the State
Council's Development Research Centre, said the Japanese Government does not
want to engage in direct FTA talks with China partly because it is wary about
the latter's emerging economic power.
Japan also worries that FTA talks with China and ROK
would force it to open up its agricultural market, which is a very sensitive
sector for Japan.
Closer co-operation
needed
In view of their uncertain FTA prospects, China,
Japan and ROK should seek to take more orchestrated actions in international
economic affairs, Zhao said.
The three economies have increasingly more in common
in terms of industrial structure, so they should have closer co-operation in
sectors such as energy and steel and on issues such as standards of information
technology products.
The recent international disputes over ore prices
highlighted the need for co-ordination among the three. Like many issues
concerning international trade, being in a bloc puts a trading nation in a
better position than being alone in the negotiations, Zhao said.
In fact, China, Japan and ROK all have strong steel
industries and are all big ore importers. They will definitely have a bigger say
in negotiations if they joined forces.
Within Northeast Asia, strengthening trade ties among
the three countries also demands more consultation and discussion.
Mechanisms have been set up for three-party talks on
issues such as public finance, macroeconomic management, finance and quarantine.
In the non-governmental sectors, exchanges between
industry associations and enterprises from the three countries are also
increasing.
(Source: China Daily)
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