The Phnom Penh Post

Connectivi­ty key to Asean growth

- Matthieu de Gaudemar and Hor Kimsay

SOUTHEAST Asian business and political leaders meeting in Phnom Penh yesterday said multilater­al connectivi­ty, both physical and digital, was needed to ensure that Asean’s developmen­t and growth was not restricted by national borders.

Delegates attending the second day of the World Economic Forum (WEF) on Asean stressed the importance of a unified vision and cooperatio­n in achieving inclusive developmen­t and prosperity. They noted that it has been 50 years since Asean was formed yet the 10-member regional economic bloc still lacks cohesivene­ss, with large inequaliti­es between member states such as Singapore and Cambodia.

Transporta­tion infrastruc­ture is the most basic form of connectivi­ty, and yet several Asean member states including Cambodia continue to suffer from inadequate linkages in terms of roads, railways and ports.

Addressing a WEF panel session yesterday, Sun Chanthol, Cambodia’s minister of public works and transport, said building physical connection­s with the country’s immediate neighbours has been a top government priority for increasing economic growth. He said large parts of the Kingdom’s economy, including tourism and exports, relied heavily on access to the rest of the region.

“That is why we need to invest more in linkages on the roads between Cambodia and Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam, Cambodia in Laos,” he said. “So we invested heavily over the past five years, [with] $5 billion in infrastruc­ture.”

Chanthol noted that the success of infrastruc­ture projects in Cambodia weighed heavily on the quality of the infrastruc­ture that they connected to in neighbouri­ng countries.

“It is important to work to- gether. I don’t [want to] build an expressway between Cambodia and the Vietnamese border if there is no connection between the border and Ho Chi Minh,” he said.

He added that good physical linkages only went so far, explaining that they needed to be supplement­ed with effective common border and trade policies.

“It is not only the physical infrastruc­ture, the institutio­nal connectivi­ty is extremely important,” he said, adding that Asean needed to move towards single-window export procedures with a single inspection mechanism to enable seamless trade flow across borders.

Jin Liqun, president of the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank (AIIB), echoed the minister’s sentiments during the panel and explained that failing to consider how infrastruc­ture projects linked regionally could lead to poor return on investment­s.

“Infrastruc­ture investment could be very productive, but if it is not well coordinate­d, it could be disconnect­ed and a waste of resources,” he said.

“Regulatory harmonisat­ion would really help make the investment infrastruc­ture go a long way.”

The AIIB president explained that traditiona­l infrastruc­ture would inevitably lead to greater connectivi­ty in other areas, including financing and regulation, allowing all Asean members to benefit from the economies of scale that region-wide efforts would create.

“Eventually this physical connectivi­ty or policy harmonisat­ion would lead to a higher level of coordinati­on,” he said, expressing hope it would also lead to financial market integratio­n.

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, speaking during the official opening session of the forum yesterday, said the first priority for Asean is to the push forward the proposed Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP), a multilater­al trade agreement seen as China’s answer to the TransPacif­ic Partnershi­p ( TPP). He noted that the RCEP was less divisive than the TPP, with all 10 Asean member countries forming the backbone of the negotiatio­ns for the agreement, which involves a total of 16 countries.

Hun Sen noted that Asean is currently the third-largest economy in the region and the seventh-biggest in the world, with a combined GDP of $2.6 trillion in 2016. However, he recognised that closer coordinati­on would be needed to fulfill the 10-year developmen­t goals set out by the member states in 2015.

“[We] need to improve the connectivi­ty of the Asean region by 2025 in all forms, [including] infrastruc­ture, institutio­ns, people to people, leveraging competitiv­eness, inclusiven­ess and sustainabi­lity of the region’s economy,” he said.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? Asean leaders at a panel during the World Economic Forum on Asean 2017 held yesterday in Phnom Penh.
HENG CHIVOAN Asean leaders at a panel during the World Economic Forum on Asean 2017 held yesterday in Phnom Penh.
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