Asia-Pacific nations are under pres-sure at an annual summit starting yesterday to consider a US-led drive for a huge free trade area stretching from China to Chile, but analysts question whether it would be feasible.
The Free Trade Area of the Asia Pacific, or FTAAP, would seek to harmonize a "noodle bowl" of bilateral and sub-regional agreements and offer an alternative to floundering global trade talks.
Advocates argue that it offers the best alternative liberalization vehicle in case the current Doha round of WTO talks collapses.
The Doha round on reducing global trade barriers has been deadlocked since July, mostly because of rows between the US, the EU and developing countries over agricultural subsidies.
"The FTAAP is an idea whose time is coming, if it has not already arrived," said Fred Bergsten, director of the Institute for International Economics in Washington.
A "fallback Plan B may become essential to keep the global trading system from relapsing into protectionism as the momentum of liberalization stalls," he wrote in a research paper.
The paper is part of a joint study by two respected business groups -- the APEC Business Advisory Council and the Pacific Economic Cooperation Council (PECC) -- on the feasibility of an APEC-wide free trade deal.
A report on the results of the study was obtained by reporters.
The US, the most influential member of APEC, is leading the push to study the feasibility of such a zone involving all 21 members.
US President George W. Bush may raise the issue during this weekend's leaders' summit in Hanoi, a Southeast Asian trade official said. But senior officials preparing for the summit said there has been opposition to the idea from countries like China.
While the FTAAP has certain attractive elements, the joint research paper concluded it was simply not politically feasible in the near term.
"The main reason for this assessment is that the political challenges of negotiating an FTAAP are so massive when placed against any likely political will," said Charles Morrison, PECC chairman and president of the Hawaii-based think tank East West Center.
Negotiating a free trade pact would need an overhaul of APEC processes, the business-backed study said. Commitments under the current APEC structure are voluntary, while a free trade agreement would be legally binding.
"Even before negotiations could begin, they would require major and controversial changes in APEC's '`ocial contract' which our studies indicate is likely to be resisted by a number of important member-economies," Morrison wrote.
Vinod Aggarwal, director of the APEC Study Center at the University of California, Berkeley, said protectionist interests arising from Washington's policy of selective liberalization could scuttle a cross-Pacific trade zone, with US industry likely to prefer the bilateral route.
Moreover, the growing US trade deficit with China is likely to render any regional free trade deal involving Beijing "dead on arrival in Congress for the foreseeable future," he said.
Bergsten, however, argued that while the leaders may not fully endorse the project this time, they should at least order an official study or exploratory discussion of the concept.
With APEC accounting for 60 percent of global economic output and half of world trade, the trade zone would be the single largest liberalization in history, Bergsten said.
He said agreeing to study the feasibility of an FTAAP could also act as a "credible political jolt" to non-APEC states, the EU, India and Brazil, forcing them to make new offers that would jumpstart the Doha round.
Bergsten said the proliferation of free trade pacts in East Asia -- which could evolve into a wider East Asia free trade zone -- threatened to "draw a line down the middle of the Pacific" amid similar trade groupings involving the US and Latin America.
This would "raise severe political and even security as well as economic problems for many countries in the region," he said.
NO HUMAN ERROR: After the incident, the Coast Guard Administration said it would obtain uncrewed aerial vehicles and vessels to boost its detection capacity Authorities would improve border control to prevent unlawful entry into Taiwan’s waters and safeguard national security, the Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) said yesterday after a Chinese man reached the nation’s coast on an inflatable boat, saying he “defected to freedom.” The man was found on a rubber boat when he was about to set foot on Taiwan at the estuary of Houkeng River (後坑溪) near Taiping Borough (太平) in New Taipei City’s Linkou District (林口), authorities said. The Coast Guard Administration’s (CGA) northern branch said it received a report at 6:30am yesterday morning from the New Taipei City Fire Department about a
IN BEIJING’S FAVOR: A China Coast Guard spokesperson said that the Chinese maritime police would continue to carry out law enforcement activities in waters it claims The Philippines withdrew its coast guard vessel from a South China Sea shoal that has recently been at the center of tensions with Beijing. BRP Teresa Magbanua “was compelled to return to port” from Sabina Shoal (Xianbin Shoal, 仙濱暗沙) due to bad weather, depleted supplies and the need to evacuate personnel requiring medical care, the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) spokesman Jay Tarriela said yesterday in a post on X. The Philippine vessel “will be in tiptop shape to resume her mission” after it has been resupplied and repaired, Philippine Executive Secretary Lucas Bersamin, who heads the nation’s maritime council, said
CHINA POLICY: At the seventh US-EU Dialogue on China, the two sides issued strong support for Taiwan and condemned China’s actions in the South China Sea The US and EU issued a joint statement on Wednesday supporting Taiwan’s international participation, notably omitting the “one China” policy in a departure from previous similar statements, following high-level talks on China and the Indo-Pacific region. The statement also urged China to show restraint in the Taiwan Strait. US Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell and European External Action Service Secretary-General Stefano Sannino cochaired the seventh US-EU Dialogue on China and the sixth US-EU Indo-Pacific Consultations from Monday to Tuesday. Since the Indo-Pacific consultations were launched in 2021, references to the “one China” policy have appeared in every statement apart from the
More than 500 people on Saturday marched in New York in support of Taiwan’s entry to the UN, significantly more people than previous years. The march, coinciding with the ongoing 79th session of the UN General Assembly, comes close on the heels of growing international discourse regarding the meaning of UN Resolution 2758. Resolution 2758, adopted by the UN General Assembly in 1971, recognizes the People’s Republic of China (PRC) as the “only lawful representative of China.” It resulted in the Republic of China (ROC) losing its seat at the UN to the PRC. Taiwan has since been excluded from