Special Report: Boao Forum For Asia
2009
Special Report: Global Financial Crisis
by Xinhua writers Liu Jie, Zhou Zhengping, Fan Xi
BOAO, Hainan, April 17 (Xinhua) -- Although Asian
leaders lost a chance to discuss a prescription for the financial crisis at the
ruined ASEAN summit in Thailand, the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) is expected to
offer a platform for them to seek the "Asian value" in tackling the worst global
economic turmoil in seven decades.
At the G20 London summit two weeks ago, voices of the
emerging economies were heard by the developed countries on an unprecedented
scale. However, that was far from enough.
As another international convention focusing on
financial crisis after the G20 summit, the BFA's Annual Conference 2009 held
from Friday to Sunday in Boao, a scenic town in south China's Hainan Province,
will be a good place for emerging Asian economies to better voice their views,
said BFA Secretary-General Long Yongtu.
With the theme of "Asia: Managing Beyond Crisis", the
three-day session is expected to showcase the role of emerging countries in
reshaping the global financial system, because their presence can not be ignored
and their role in the world economy becomes increasingly important, said Long.
The U.S. financial system used to be a model for
Asian countries after weak financial regulation and collaboration threw them
into a regional financial crisis in 1997.
Ten years on, however, the United States itself
became the birthplace of a major crisis, which underpinned the importance of
reflecting on past decisions and explore its own way to deal with the turmoil by
Asian countries rather than simply coping others, analysts say.
PLATFORM FOR VOICES OF ASIA
Asia used to be the growth engine of the world's
economy, but it could not escape a series of economic woe as the global
financial turmoil slashed exports, closed factories and exacerbated
unemployment.
The Asian Development Bank (ADB) predicted that the
average growth in developing Asia would slow almost by half to 3.4 percent in
2009, the worst decline since 1998.
"The global financial crisis is paramount on
everyone's minds," said Long. "As such, it is more important than ever before
the Asian leaders and business executives come together to exchange ideas and
come up with innovative solutions on the issues that matter most," he said.
More than 1,600 political leaders, business people,
and academic scholars from across the globe will discuss and debate the impact
of the crisis on Asia and how the region weathers the challenges effectively,
according to the organizer.
Delegates will discuss how the emerging countries
should play their part in reshaping the global financial system, and seek a
balance between financial regulation and innovation. They will also discuss
solutions to expand foreign trade and investment, and measures to cope with the
volatile commodity prices.
The leaders, including Pakistani President Asif Ali
Zardari and New Zealand Prime Minister John Key, will speak at the opening
ceremony of the forum on Saturday.
Former Japanese Prime Minister Fukuda Yasuo and
former Chinese Vice Premier Zeng Peiyan will deliver keynote speeches on world
economic outlook at the opening luncheon on Saturday.
On Saturday evening, former U.S. President George W.
Bush will address the forum and discuss his time in office and outlook for the
future. It will be his first appearance in Asia after he left the Oval Office in
January.
In the meantime, more than 800 business people will
attend the conference. The biggest lineup includes senior executives from the
world's leading banks such as the Bank of America and Merrill Lynch, to the
world's top IT companies including Google and Netease.
The organizers said the BFA and ADB will jointly
launch a report assessing the progress of regional cooperation in Asia amid the
global crisis.
The report, or Boao Forum for Asia Annual Report on
Progress of Regional Cooperation in Asia amidst the Global Financial Crisis,
will evaluate the effects of the crisis on emerging Asia and the responses
adopted by governments.
"It will also suggests policy options for addressing
the crisis in the contexts of regional cooperation," the organizers said.
CHINA'S ROLE CRITICAL
This year's conference is notably eye-catching is
also because the world are looking to more answers given by China to the crisis.
Although China has stressed that the world should reassess its power before
naming it a savior, many countries pin hopes on the recovery of the world's
third largest economy.
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao will deliver a keynote
speech at the opening ceremony on Saturday. His remarks will be much anticipated
after a series of economic data indicated positive changes in the Chinese
economy.
Premier Wen said at a Cabinet executive meeting on
Thursday that the government's stimulus moves had begun to produce results and
the economy was in "better-than-expected" shape, although the growth domestic
production grew just 6.1 percent in the first quarter, the slowest pace in a
decade.
The premier cited pick-ups in investment, consumption
and industrial output, ample liquidity in the banking system, and improved
market expectations as signs of those "positive changes."
"However, we must also be clear-headed and understand
that grounds for the country's economic recovery are not solid enough yet, as
circumstances both at home and abroad remain grim," Wen warned.
In such a context, the presence of major Chinese
officials including central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan, commerce minister Chen
Deming, and banking regulator Liu Mingkang at this year's BFA meeting deserves
great attention, as people expect to read more between the lines to better track
the economic outlook.
DIVERSIFIED TOPICS AND VALUE OF
CULTURE
Although discussions about financial crisis and
emerging economies take up more than one third of the topics, traditional themes
such as green development and Internet innovation are also on the agenda.
The forum will for the first time add contemporary
art and creative industry into the topic list, underlining Asia's resolution to
explore new growth areas amid the economic restructuring.
"The crisis will generate more artistic imagination,"
said Wang Jian, an established cellist, referring to the value of culture in
this region. He said that America and European countries still lack
understanding of the profound and magnificent cultural tradition of China.
The unique culture in East Asia has been a main
factor that turns the region into a global production and manufacturing base,
according to Chen Zhiwu, a professor of Yela University. "Mass production could
be well organized through 'iron discipline'. East Asian and Southeast Asian
societies, which are significantly influenced by the obedient culture of
Confucian, might have accepted the concept of regarding people as screws in
production organizations," he said.
However, the huge consumption potential of Asia is
hard to realize due to many factors including an immature democracy system, he
said, suggesting that the reform of the mechanisms of economy, politics and
culture be accelerated.
BFA was established in 2001 as a platform for
high-level interaction between leaders from Asia and around the world. It is
aimed at promoting the development goals of Asian countries through greater
regional economic integration.

