The Oklahoman

APEC leaders, including Trump, agree on free trade

- By Eileen Ng

KU ALA LUMP UR, Malaysia—Leaders from t he Asia- Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n forum, including U.S. President Donald Trump, pledged Friday to work toward free, open and non-discrimina­tory trade and investment to revive their corona virus-battered economies.

The leaders cast aside difference­s to issue their first joint statement since 2017, in which they agreed to further deepen regional integratio­n by working toward a massive free trade agreement involving the 21 APEC economies.

This year's host, Malaysian Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin, told a news conference that the U.S.-China trade war that had hampered talks in the past has “been eclipsed” by the COVID-19 pandemic.

With growth in the Asia-Pacific region expected to slump 2.7% this year, from a 3.6% growth in 2019, he said APEC's focus was on accelerati­ng economic recovery and developing an affordable vaccine.

“The health risks and its impact on the global economic ecosystem has been the major priority agenda for all APEC economies this year,” he said.

AP EC, whose members account for 60% of global GDP, has also “pledged to refrain from back tracking and resorting to protection­ist measures to keep markets and borders open,” he added.

The APEC leaders' meeting was the first since 2018 after last year's host, Chile, canceled the annual summit due to violent domestic protests. But at the Papua New Guinea summit in 2018, APEC leaders failed to issue a joint statement for the first time amid a U.S.-China row over trade policies.

Trump' s participat­ion Friday, his first since 2017, came as a surprise as he challenges the outcome of the U.S. presidenti­al election, won by Joe Biden. Last weekend, Trump skipped the East Asia Summits and withdrew from s peaking at an APEC CEO meeting earlier Friday.

Trump, whose “America First” policy has alienated trading partners, addressed the meeting but his speech wasn't immediatel­y available.

Chinese President Xi Jinping, in his remarks, urged countries to “defend multilater­alism” and called for the establishm­ent of an “AsiaPacifi­c free trade zone at an early date.”

He told the meeting that Beijing would also “actively consider” joining the Comprehens­ive and Progressiv­e Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, a trade agreement that includes Japan, Canada, Mexico and other regional economies but not the United States. Trump pulled out of the CPTPP's predecesso­r, the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, which never took effect.

Xi's comments came just after Beijing and 14 Asian nation sinked the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p, the world's largest free trade agreement.

If China were to join the CPTPP, that would make Xi's government a member of the Asia-Pacific region's two biggest trade arrangemen­ts, while Washington is part of neither.

APEC leaders adopted the Put ra jay a Vision 2040, a new 20- year growth vision to replace the Bogor Goals named after the Indonesian town where leaders agreed in 1994 to free and open trade and investment.

They pledged to build an “open, dynamic, resilient and peaceful region” by 2040, and tasked officers to draw up implementa­tion plans by next year.

“We recognize the importance of a free, open, fair, non- discrimina­tory, transparen­t and predictabl­e trade and investment environmen­t to drive economic recover y at such a challengin­g time,” according to the joint statement.

“Were solve to further navigate the region towards recovery along t he path of strong, balanced, inclusive, sustainabl­e, innovative and secure economic growth,” the statement added.

Earlier Friday, the leaders of Japan and New Zealand warned countries against the temptation of retreating into trade protection­ism.

Speaking by video link from Tokyo to the meeting of APEC CEOs, Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said “making rules for a free and fair global economy is critically important.”

While continuing to promote W TO reform, he said Japan will“aspire for the Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific.”

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, who will be next year's APEC host, voiced hope that APEC leaders will join hands to bolster the regional economy.

“As we confront this generation's biggest economic challenge, we must not repeat t he mistakes of history by retreating into protection­ism. APEC must continue to commit to keeping markets open and trade flowing,” she said.

AP EC brings together Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, China, Hong Kong, Indonesia Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Peru, Philippine­s, Russia Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand and the United States.

New Zealand will also host next year's APEC meetings virtually due to the pandemic.

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