Special: President Hu Attends Financial Summit,
APEC Meeting, Visits Four Nations
Special Report: Global Financial Crisis
By Jin Jing, Tian Fan
LIMA, Nov. 21 (Xinhua) -- Leaders of the Asia-Pacific
Economic Cooperation (APEC) member economies are meeting Saturday in the
Peruvian capital Lima for their annual summit, raising fresh hopes of restoring
market confidence in the teeth of the ongoing financial storm.
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Ministers of Foreign Affairs and Trade
pose for an official photo during the 20th APEC Joint Ministerial Meeting
in Lima, Nov. 19, 2008.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
¡¡¡¡BOLDER ACTIONS
The 21-member APEC is expected to take some
coordinated and bolder actions to tackle the global financial crisis.
As one of the world's biggest regional blocs with a
wide geographical span and great diversity among its members, APEC will send a
strong signal on how the world deals with the global financial problem, analysts
say.
Peruvian President Alan Garcia has called APEC "the
best tool the world economy has" against the crisis, given the robust
manufacturing and trade among the Asia-Pacific member economies.
APEC represents the most economically dynamic region
in the world, with its member economies accounting for approximately 41 percent
of the world's population, about 56 percent of world GDP and nearly half of
world trade.
On Thursday, APEC foreign and trade ministers called
for joint efforts to overcome the ongoing global financial crisis and revive the
Doha Round trade negotiations.
"Ensuring a rapid, coordinated and effective response
to the current global financial crisis is the highest priority for APEC
economies and will be the focus of attention" when APEC leaders meet on the
weekend, said the ministers in a joint statement.
"APEC economies are committed to implementing all
necessary measures to bolster the real economy and boost investment and
consumption levels in the region," it said.
APEC leaders are expected to issue a special
declaration on the ongoing financial crisis as a "complement" to the action plan
adopted by G20 countries in Washington earlier this month. Nine of the G20
nations, including the United States and China, are members of the
APEC.
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Representatives attend the concluding
press conference of the 20th Ministerial Meeting of the Asia-Pacific
Economic Cooperation (APEC) in Lima, capital of Peru, Nov. 20, 2008.
Foreign and trade ministers from the 21 member economies of the APEC forum
on Thursday called for joint efforts to overcome the ongoing global
financial crisis and revive the Doha Round trade negotiations.
(Xinhua Photo) Photo
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DOHA TALKS
Apart from the financial crisis, the leaders are also
expected to discuss the stalled WTO Doha Round talks among other issues such as
climate change, energy and food security.
Some leaders have hoped to seek a framework of
agreement on the Doha Round by the end of this year as part of a strategy to
tackle the financial crisis.
However, "intensive work" is still needed to make a
breakthrough in this regard, said Elizabeth Chelliah, chairwoman of the APEC
Committee on Trade and Investment.
A repeated failure to clinch a deal on the
multilateral trade talks would be a heavy blow to market confidence, which is
key to overcome the ongoing crisis, analysts say.
APEC ministers have shown strong determination to
seek a final agreement on the Doha talks at an early date.
Australian Trade Minister Simon Crean noted that APEC
ministers not only have reached a consensus on pushing forward the Doha talks
but also on how to conclude it.
Senior officials of the WTO members are urged to meet
in Geneva over the weekend to prepare for a meeting for trade ministers to
address the issue.
The Doha talks, which started in 2001, has been
deadlocked over the past seven years and repeatedly missed deadlines. The latest
setback came in July when WTO trade ministers failed to wrap up the negotiations
due to disagreements between the Untied States and India on a special safeguard
mechanism for agricultural products of developing countries.
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Staff members work on an advertising
board of the Economic Leaders' Informal Meeting of the Asia-Pacific
Economic Cooperation (APEC), in Lima, capital of Peru, Nov. 14, 2008. The
16th APEC Economic Leaders' Informal Meeting is scheduled to be held Nov.
22-23 in the Peruvian capital of Lima.(Xinhua
File Photo) Photo
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BUILDING CONFIDENCE
Despite various economic stimulus plans by some
nations to thaw off credit squeeze and pledges by the G20 countries to
strengthen financial oversight, there is no easing sign of the grave financial
situation.
Japan, the world's second biggest economy, has
officially slid into recession for the first time since 2001, according to
government data issued earlier this week.
The recession of Japan, along with the 15-nation
euro-zone, is largely attributed to a sharp cutback in corporate investment amid
diminishing domestic and global demand, analysts say.
Adding to the concerns is the fragility of emerging
economies amid the unfolding global financial crisis that has threatened to
affect the real economies.
Some developing countries, including APEC members
Mexico, Indonesia and Thailand, have seen a sharp decline in exports and foreign
direct investments.
Chinese President Hu Jintao has called for special
attention to the developing and poor nations during the financial crisis.
The United States has so far shied away from making
any commitment to reforming global institutions such as International Monetary
Fund and World Bank as critics have long called for increasing participation by
emerging economies in these bodies.
It remained to be seen how the APEC economies will
overcome their diverse political and economic backgrounds to join hands in
dealing with the crisis.
Established in 1989, APEC groups Australia, Brunei,
Canada, Chile, China, China's Hong Kong, Chinese Taipei, Indonesia, Japan,
Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Peru, the Philippines, Russia,
Singapore, South Korea, Thailand, the United States and Vietnam.
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A worker pastes a poster of the Economic
Leaders' Informal Meeting of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC),
in Lima, capital of Peru, Nov. 14, 2008. The 16th APEC Economic Leaders'
Informal Meeting is scheduled to be held Nov. 22-23 in the Peruvian
capital of Lima.(Xinhua File Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |

