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Previous APEC Economic Leaders' Meetings
www.chinaview.cn 2006-11-18 13:31:14

    HANOI, Nov. 18 (Xinhua) -- The 14th Economic Leaders' Meeting of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum will kick off in Vietnam's capital city of Hanoi on Saturday under the themeof "Towards a Dynamic Community for Sustainable Development and Prosperity."

    The two-day event is the culmination of this year's annual APEC meetings, which also include the Ministerial Meeting on Nov. 15-16, Senior Officials' Meeting on Nov. 12-13.

    The annual gathering of Pacific-Rim leaders is a forum of the highest level in the Asia-Pacific region. The idea of "an Asia-Pacific Summit" was first given by then Australian Prime Minister Paul Keating in April 1992 and the first informal leaders' meeting took place in November 1993 in Seattle, the United States. Before that, APEC had been operating at ministerial level only.

    The following are basic facts about the previous Economic Leaders' Meetings:

    1. Seattle, the United States, 1993

    The economic leaders discussed topics such as the future of the Asia-Pacific region, regional cooperation and its mechanism. The most remarkable achievement of the meeting was the creation of a vision of community of Asia-Pacific economies. An Economic Vision Statement released by the meeting said that the forum should foster the spirit of openness and partnership, support an open international trading system and reduce trade and investment barriers.

    2. Bogor, Indonesia, 1994

    The meeting endorsed the Bogor Goals, which envisioned the achievement of free and open trade and investment for developed member economies by 2010 and developing ones by 2020. The meeting also adopted the Bogor Declaration, known as the Declaration of Common Resolve.

    3. Osaka, Japan, 1995

    The economic leaders approved a Declaration for Action (Osaka Declaration) and adopted the Osaka Action Agenda as a framework to achieve the commitments of the Bogor Declaration. The documents firmly established the "two wheels" of APEC activities: trade and investment liberalization and facilitation and economic and technical cooperation (Ecotech). The Osaka Action Agenda also provided individual action plans and collective action plans for the implementation of the Bogor Goals.

    4. Cubic Bay, the Philippines, 1996

    The economic leaders approved the Manila Action Plan for APEC and the APEC Economic Leaders' Declaration: From Vision to Action. The plan included the following themes: greater market access in goods and services, an open investment regime, reduced business costs, an open and efficient infrastructure sector, and strengthened economic and technical cooperation.

    The APEC leaders also underlined the following six Ecotech areas: developing human capital, fostering safe and efficient capital markets, strengthening economic infrastructure, harnessing technologies of the future, promoting environmentally sustainable growth, and encouraging the growth of small and medium-sized enterprises.

    5. Vancouver, Canada, 1997

    The APEC economic leaders endorsed their ministers' agreement that action should be taken for the early voluntary sectoral liberalization in 15 sectors, with nine to be advanced through 1998 and implementation to begin in 1999. They also endorsed the Vancouver Framework for Enhanced Public-Private Partnership for Infrastructure Development.

    The Vancouver meeting gave much attention to the financial crisis that swept Southeast Asia.

    6. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, 1998

    The economic leaders reaffirmed their confidence in the strong economic fundamentals and prospects for recovery of the APEC member economies. They agreed to pursue a cooperative growth to end the financial crisis.

    A number of important documents were approved, including the APEC Economic Leaders Declaration: Strengthening the Foundations for Growth; the 1998 Agenda of APEC Science and Technology Industry Cooperation into the 21st Century; and the 1998 Kuala Lumpur Action Program on Skills Development.

    7. Auckland, New Zealand, 1999

    The APEC leaders pledged to strengthen markets and improve the international framework governing trade and investment. They also endorsed the APEC Leaders Declaration: the Auckland Challenge, and the APEC Principles to Enhance Competition and Regulatory Reform.

    8. Bandar Seri Begawan, Brunei, 2000

    The major topics of the meeting included globalization, the New Economy, economic and technical cooperation and human resource development.

    The APEC leaders adopted the APEC Economic Leaders' Declaration: Delivering to the Community, and Action Agenda for New Economy in 2000.

    9. Shanghai, China, 2001

    The meeting was held under the theme of "Meeting New Challengesin the New Century: Achieving Common Prosperity through Participation and Cooperation." It had three sub-themes or agenda items: sharing the benefits of globalization and the new economy, advancing trade and investment, and promoting sustainable economic growth. The leaders reached consensus on the economic scenario of the world and the Asia-Pacific region, the direction of APEC development in the future, human capacity building and other issues.

    A declaration of the economic leaders was issued at the end of the summit.

    10. Los Cabos, Mexico, 2002

    The theme of the meeting was "Expanding the Benefits of Cooperation for Economic Growth and Development -- Implementing the Vision."

    The leaders discussed counter-terrorism issues; growth policies for the new economy; ways to benefit from development, particularly for small, medium and micro enterprises; and ways to promote greater participation in APEC by women and young people.

    The meeting ended with the adoption of a declaration on economic growth and statements on counter-terrorism.

    11. Bangkok, Thailand, 2003

    The theme of the meeting was "A world of Differences: Partnership for the Future." The economic leaders adopted "Bangkok Declaration on Partnership for the Future," calling for restarting the Doha Round of multilateral trade talks and enhancing human security through strengthened and better coordinated anti-terror efforts.

    12. Santiago, Chile, 2004

    The theme of the meeting was "One Community, Our Future." The leaders adopted Santiago Declaration aimed at supporting global trade talks, improving global security and other issues.

    13. Busan, South Korea, 2005

    Under the theme of "Towards One Community: Meet the Challenge, Make the Change," the leaders agreed to advance freer trade, enhance human security, prevent spreed of avian influenza and revive the World Trade Organization's Doha Development Agenda.

    They adopted the Busan Declaration on achieving stability, security and prosperity in the region and pledged to work towards the Bogor Goals with the Busan Roadmap, a mid-term stocktake of progress towards the Goals.

Editor: Liu Dan
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