ASEAN Leaders Accept Need for Deeper Integration and Inclusive Growth

Published
01 Jun 2016
2016
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Dai Di, Communications Officer, Tel.: +41 (0)79 949 4637, Email: di.dai@weforum.org

· The 25th World Economic Forum on ASEAN opens, with regional leaders stressing their commitment to an agenda of inclusion and growth

· ASEAN countries are focusing on restructuring their economies to improve productivity and investing in education and infrastructure

· The region must strengthen its institutions and work towards more transparent governance if it is to take full advantage of its youthful demographics

· For more information about the meeting: http://wef.ch/asean16

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, 1 June 2016 – For ASEAN to achieve both growth and inclusion will require countries in the region to pursue greater integration and their respective agendas of reform and liberalization, five South-East Asian leaders told nearly 600 business, government and civil society participants in the opening plenary of the 25th World Economic Forum on ASEAN. “The prize must be taken,” said Mohd Najib Bin Tun Abdul Razak, Prime Minister and Minister of Finance of Malaysia. “The great opportunities it promises will not miraculously appear without our continued efforts to reform, liberalize and integrate.”

While the region launched the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) single-market initiative in 2015, significant impediments to real integration such as the lack of common documentation requirements, whether for pharmaceutical products or port entry, remain, Najib reckoned. “The AEC will never reach true fruition if we do not work to eradicate these barriers. These are the kinds of issues that have to be tackled head-on for us to reach that horizon. They are complex, detailed and require an extraordinary amount of coordination.” He said: “What is required is nothing short of a complete transformation if ASEAN is to achieve its potential. We need a transformation of rules, procedures and habits. But we also need a transformation of the mind, as we learn to think of ourselves more as ASEAN, act as ASEAN, and then reap the benefits of being ASEAN.”

The global economic crisis and the rebalancing of the Chinese and Indian economies have made it more challenging for countries in the region to maintain high growth, Samdech Techno Hun Sen, Prime Minister of Cambodia, said in his remarks. “ASEAN countries themselves are competing within the organization, each trying to attract investment. We have to have some coordination – or else our production will make little profit.”

Rui Maria de Araújo, Prime Minister of Timor-Leste, said that, since gaining independence, his country’s priority has been to secure peace and stability, build up the state institutions and promote reconciliation in society and with neighbouring Indonesia. Another key challenge is to deal with the “huge skills mismatch” in the labour market, especially with 60% of the population under the age of 25. The government is also focusing on the inclusion of women. “We believe that, with the integration of the societies and communities in ASEAN and our internal reforms, we will be able to meet the challenges we are facing.”

In Indonesia’s programme for inclusive growth, “our first priority is infrastructure – everything including electricity and roads,” Jusuf Kalla, Vice-President of Indonesia, said. The government is also working on increasing agricultural productivity and to create more jobs in manufacturing. He also argued that ASEAN economies should cooperate so they do not push labour prices down. Vietnam is pursuing a similar reform agenda, concentrating on economic restructuring, infrastructure development and the upgrading of the education system, Trinh Dinh Dung, Deputy Prime Minister of Vietnam, said. He noted that his country also boasts a very young population. “These are not small challenges, but they are a matter of competitiveness and the quality of growth so we are accelerating reforms and integration.”

Earlier, in a video message, Klaus Schwab, Founder and Executive Chairman of the World Economic Forum, told participants that South-East Asia is at an important crossroads. “ASEAN on the one hand offers so many opportunities and has such great potential but on the other hand has to prepare for the future,” he said. “The future will be very much dominated by the notion of being in the Fourth Industrial Revolution. We will need new skills. We will need very deep cooperation for infrastructure and in the political, economic and social fields.” He concluded: “The ASEAN countries have the potential to be in the lead in the Fourth Industrial Revolution.”

You can read the full speech of the Prime Minister here.

The Co-Chairs of the World Economic Forum on ASEAN are: Sigve Brekke, Chief Executive Officer, Telenor, Norway; Kathleen Chew, Group Legal Counsel, YTL Corporation Berhad, Malaysia; Yoshiaki Fujimori, President and Chief Executive Officer, LIXIL Group Corporation, Japan; Shahril bin Shamsuddin, President and Group Chief Executive Officer, SapuraKencana Petroleum Berhad, Malaysia; Salil Shetty, Secretary-General, Amnesty International, United Kingdom and George Yeo, Visiting Scholar, Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore, Singapore.

Notes to Editors

· Follow the World Economic Forum on ASEAN at http://wef.ch/ASEAN16

· Click here for the Meeting Overview and Programme at a Glance

· Watch sessions live at http://wef.ch/live

· Become a fan of the Forum on Facebook at http://wef.ch/facebook

· Follow the Forum on Twitter at http://wef.ch/twitter and #asean16 and #wef

Read our blogs at http://wef.ch/agenda

All opinions expressed are those of the author. The World Economic Forum Blog is an independent and neutral platform dedicated to generating debate around the key topics that shape global, regional and industry agendas.

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