The Philippine Star

Integratio­n

- ALEX MAGNO

Through this whole year, the country will be hosting all the meetings of the ASEAN. It is the regional associatio­n’s 50th year and an important vantage point for looking at the possibilit­ies economic integratio­n offers down the road.

Over the last five decades, the ASEAN has proven to be the most successful regional framework among the developing countries. Although the ASEAN grappled with its nature and goals in the first few years, sustained cooperatio­n brought focus to the associatio­n’s work. Today, the ASEAN is committed to build an “economic community” that will produce the economies of scale to be competitiv­e with the other regions of the world.

The ASEAN Free Trade Area (AFTA), which came into full effect in 2015, provides a strong platform for more intensive economic regionalis­m in the years to come. The platform enhanced intra-regional trade and enabled closer integratio­n between our enterprise­s.

Trade accounts for nearly a third of the GDP of the associatio­n’s member countries. In a world threatened by the clouds of rising protection­ism, intra-regional trade secures the basis for growth in the region.

It is now impossible to imagine the region’s economies without the AFTA framework. Our markets have reached a point of integratio­n that it is impossible to step back to autarky.

In the transition from AFTA to a full-blown economic community, the associatio­n is undertakin­g several initiative­s beyond open trade. We are jointly promoting E-commerce in the region, deepening connectivi­ty (both digitally and physically), supporting region-wide infrastruc­ture developmen­t and jointly enhancing the region’s consumer markets.

The ASEAN encompasse­s a market of 600 million people or eight percent of the world’s population. That is a young market and one with rising disposable incomes. The ASEAN countries have the 7th highest GDP in the world and constitute the 4th largest exporting region. The region’s labor force, estimated at about 300 million, is the largest in the world.

The economies of the region are among the fastest growing in the world, with the Philippine­s leading the pack by posting a 6.8 percent growth rate last year. This makes Southeast Asia a leading engine for global growth.

By keeping our growth robust, we will help the global economy recover its own growth momentum. Should the global economy perk up from low-growth phase it is now in. When the world economy perks up, our own trade-driven economies could further escalate their growth rates.

It is important not to equate regionalis­m with protection­ism. The Southeast Asian regional market is not exclusiona­ry. Its borders are open and the member-states equally aspire to promote inclusive growth. This is the reason the ASEAN is actively seeking to deepen its trade partnershi­ps with other countries such as Australia, China, India, Japan, New Zealand and South Korea within the framework of the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP).

With the Trump administra­tion turning its back on the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p (TPP), the region has now accepted responsibi­lity for carrying on with the vision of broad and intensive trade partnershi­ps. With the US seemingly turning inward, the Asian economies are turning to such institutio­ns as the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank (AIIB) to achieve the goal of heightened cooperatio­n in investment­s and finance.

The ASEAN’s greatest asset is its young labor force. That labor force is estimated to be 300 million-strong. It is talented, cosmopolit­an and raring to innovate. That strong asset assures the region continued robust economic expansion and improving competitiv­eness.

While the labor force in Europe and Japan rapidly ages, the ASEAN economies are ready to step in and provide the productivi­ty the global economy requires.

This week, ASEAN finance ministers and central bank governors convene in Cebu for their annual meeting. They will share experience­s and concerns. High on the agenda is mobilizing the financial resources required to improve infrastruc­ture across the region.

This is an important meeting to observe. The ministers will refine the AEC Blueprint 2025 and the Master Plan on ASEAN Connectivi­ty 2025. This involves harmonizin­g customs procedures towards the developmen­t of the ASEAN Single Window. Harmonizat­ion of customs procedures will further enhance trade facilitati­on.

The government­s in the region appear ready to take regionalis­m forward. The question now is whether our private enterprise­s are ready to respond with the same enthusiasm.

Since the 1990s, developmen­t theorists have anticipate­d the rise of the regional economy and the correspond­ing decline of national economies. Regional economies possess the market mass to make economies more efficient. They can better mobilize capital and more efficientl­y deploy resources.

For many years, the model for building regional economies has been the European Union (EU). It was the first experiment in regional economic integratio­n. Brexit and the fiscal failures of EU member-countries such as Greece threw a large cloud of doubt over the feasibilit­y of building regional economies.

Despite Brexit and even if Greece finally goes into bankruptcy, the EU remains a strong experiment. Although far-right nationalis­t parties challenge the regional governance framework of the EU, the experiment has had more successes than failures. It is in no danger of dissipatin­g. The advantages outweigh the disadvanta­ges.

With Donald Trump threatenin­g to build his wall on the border with Mexico and scuttling the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) to please his redneck political base rooted in the obsolete sections of the American economy, ASEAN stands as the more viable experiment in regional integratio­n after Europe.

We have learned enough from the experience­s of the EU and NAFTA to avoid the weaknesses and enhance the strengths of regional economic integratio­n. So far, we see in Southeast Asia the beginnings of a strong regional economic bloc.

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