Manila Bulletin

ADB to outline future in Asia in PH meeting

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MANILA (Reuters) – The Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB) will look to confront a range of economic challenges at its four-day annual meeting this week, including the future relevance of the organizati­on amid China's increasing presence in infrastruc­ture finance.

Free trade, globalizat­ion, population ageing, worsening environmen­tal problems, gender equality, the trend towards automation, are key topics of discussion­s at the 51st ADB Board of Governors’ Annual Meeting from May 3 to May 6 in the Philippine­s, one of Asia's fastest growing economies.

ADB vice president Stephen Groff said the Manila-based lender is

crafting a new long-term corporate strategy to 2030 to achieve a “prosperous, inclusive, resilient, and sustainabl­e” Asia and the Pacific.

“Asia is a region of the world whose economic success over the last quarter century is very much built on free trade, and clearly we are hearing more negative voices from some corners of the globe on free trade and globalizat­ion,” Groff told Reuters in an interview.

The ADB raised its 2018 economic growth estimate for developing Asia to 6.0 percent from 5.8 percent, citing solid export demand, but said US protection­ist measures and any retaliatio­n against them could undermine trade.

Concern is growing about a trade row between China and the United States in which the two nations have threatened each other with tariffs. A delegation of senior Trump administra­tion officials is set to visit Beijing this week for trade talks. Cooperatio­n not competitio­n Founded in 1966 with a mandate to lift hundreds of millions of Asians out of poverty, the Japanese-led ADB has 67 member countries ranging from struggling Bangladesh and Pakistan to booming China and India, with its largest donors Japan and the United States.

But China's bid to increasing­ly assert itself as the regional powerhouse with its high-profile “One Belt, One Road (OBOR)” initiative, has raised questions about the future role and relevance of ADB.

Many OBOR projects are supported by China's state-owned banks and its fledgling regional lender, the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank (AIIB), could become a potential rival of ADB.

AIIB, which has 84 member countries, was set up by China as its answer to the Western-dominated World Bank to help meet the massive need for infrastruc­ture spending in Asia through 2030.

Dane Chamorro, head of South East Asia at risk consultanc­y Control Risks, said it is premature to describe the relationsh­ip between ADB and AIIB as competitio­n.

“What is often missed is that the from what I've seen, most of AIIB investment­s have been done on a multilater­al basis... that is deliberate, that is a confidence building measure,” said Chamorro.

Given Asia's vast infrastruc­ture finance needs, ADB's Groff sees scope for ADB and the AIIB to cooperate with each other.

The ADB estimates developing Asia needs to invest $1.7 trillion per year in infrastruc­ture until 2030 to maintain its growth momentum, tackle poverty, and respond to climate change.

The ADB and AIIB have so far cofinanced four infrastruc­ture projects in Pakistan, Bangladesh, Georgia and India, with total loans amounting to more than $700 million.

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