The Borneo Post

SE Asia confident of growth despite trade tensions

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SINGAPORE: Southeast Asia will maintain robust economic growth despite rising tensions as tit-for-tat tariffs between the US and China stoke fears of a damaging trade war, regional finance ministers said.

“We sounded a warning about the risk of rising protection­ism and the possibilit­y of the trade disputes deteriorat­ing,” Singapore Finance Minister Heng Swee Keat told reporters after a meeting of Asean finance chiefs.

However detailed briefings by economists from the World Bank, Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and the private sector on Asean’s prospects were consistent with projection­s for strong growth, said Heng, who chaired the meeting.

The 10-member ASEAN bloc was

We sounded a warning about the risk of rising protection­ism and the possibilit­y of the trade disputes deteriorat­ing.

estimated to have grown by an ‘impressive’ 5.1 per cent last year and is expected to outpace most other regions this year, Heng said.

“As to the question whether the risk of trade disputes would then undermine investment sentiment and so on – those are things that we really have to watch,” he said.

“It is too early for us to conclude and revise growth projection­s. These are risk scenarios that we always have to watch out for but our central scenario remains pretty benign.” With tensions between the US and China stoking fears of a full-blown trade war, Heng stressed that no one would emerge a winner.

“We need to send a strong signal that trade tensions – and if it escalates into something worse – will not benefit anyone.

It will be very negative for everyone involved,” he said.

US President Donald Trump on Thursday vowed to slap an additional US$ 100 billion in tariffs on Chinese goods on top of US$ 50 billion worth of items already identified to be hit with punitive taxes.

China has also unveiled plans for retaliator­y import duties on politicall­y- sensitive US exports, including soybeans, aircraft and autos and launched a challenge at the World Trade Oganizatio­n.

Heng said the Asean ministers had agreed to push ahead with trade liberalisa­tion but take steps to help those who are negatively affected by globalisat­ion.

“We must continue to have very strong commitment to trade and to openness to the globalisat­ion process,” he said.

Asean covers a region of 650 million people, grouping Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippine­s, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. — AFP

Heng Swee Keat, Singapore Finance Minister

 ??  ?? Photo shows trains stationed on tracks at a railway station. The leaders of Benin and Niger have given their backing to Chinese involvemen­t in a controvers­ial major rail infrastruc­ture project set to span several countries. — AFP photo
Photo shows trains stationed on tracks at a railway station. The leaders of Benin and Niger have given their backing to Chinese involvemen­t in a controvers­ial major rail infrastruc­ture project set to span several countries. — AFP photo

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