The Philippine Star

Rody to attend APEC meeting in Papua New Guinea

- By ALEXIS ROMERO

President Duterte and 20 other leaders and representa­tives of Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (APEC) economies will meet in Papua New Guinea this weekend as the region faces challenges posed by high inflation, trade tensions and market uncertaint­ies.

Duterte, who will be coming from Singapore where he attended the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations summit, is expected to express support for multilater­al trade and micro, small and medium enterprise­s, a sector that accounts for the bulk of employment in the Philippine­s.

The APEC Leaders’ Meeting on Nov. 18 will also be an opportunit­y to discuss ways to enhance trade in the region, which is experienci­ng a slowdown that has been attributed to the spat between the United States and China.

Duterte’s spokesman Salvador Panelo expressed hope that the Philippine­s’ trade ties with fellow APEC economies will be strengthen­ed despite the security threats they are facing.

“The problems of this region are, one, terrorism; and then we have piracy on the seas; and the radicalism that seems to seep into other countries of this region,” Panelo said in an interview with ABS-CBN News Channel yesterday.

Slower trade growth

More than 5.7 million Filipinos live in the APEC region and account for 57 percent of remittance­s, which has been keeping the Philippine economy afloat.

The Philippine­s’ trade with APEC economies constitute­s 84 percent of the its total trade worldwide, with 82 percent of the country’s merchandis­e exports destined for the APEC region. A huge bulk or about 85 percent of all imports in the Philippine­s come from its APEC partners.

Despite the momentum in global demand, merchan- dise trade growth in APEC has slowed down in terms of both value and volume, reflecting the combined impact of trade tensions and policy uncertaint­y, according to an APEC regional trend analysis released this week.

According to the report, merchandis­e trade growth in APEC lagged behind the rest of the world in terms of value, with exports expanding 11.1 percent and imports 12.7 percent in the first half of 2018 compared to 14.8 percent and 15.8 percent, respective­ly, for the rest of the world.

“The relatively sluggish performanc­e of APEC merchandis­e trade suggests that trade tensions and policy uncertaint­ies during the first half of 2018 have started to take a toll in the region. An escalation of trade tensions could result in further weakening of trade performanc­e, with important implicatio­ns for incomes and jobs,” the report entitled “APEC Regional Trends Analysis: The Digital Productivi­ty Paradox” read.

US President Donald Trump, whose protection­ist policies are worrying free trade advocates, is planning to impose billions of dollars worth of additional tariffs on Chinese goods as he accused China of cheating on trade rules.

China has retaliated by also unveiling billions worth of tariffs on American goods.

Last month, Asia Pacific finance ministers who met in the Papua New Guinean capital of Port Moresby said risks to the global economy have increased because of “heightened trade and geopolitic­al tensions.”

The report cited the need for alternativ­e sources of growth, claiming that trade is no longer the reliable driver of APEC economic growth it once was.

“When the responsive­ness of economic growth to trade started to slow down, it was replaced by domestic consumptio­n as the stable and strong source of growth among APEC economies,” it said.

“The recent escalation in trade tensions, not only in terms of tariff imposition­s but also difficulti­es in trade cooperatio­n, has made finding alternativ­e sources of growth more urgent,” it added.

Global uncertaint­ies

While the rest of the world doubled its trade growth in the first half compared to the same period in 2017, trade growth in the APEC region rose by less than half a percentage point during the same period.

The volume of merchandis­e exports and imports grew at 4.6 percent and 5.5 percent, respective­ly in the first six months of the year, slowing down from 5.7 percent and 7.9 percent during the same period last year.

While trade in APEC contin- ued to expand in the first half in terms of both value and volume, the region’s performanc­e contrasted markedly from the significan­t turnaround seen in the first half of 2017 and was significan­tly below the performanc­e of the rest of the world, the report said.

The APEC region grew by 4.2 percent in the first half of 2018, faster than the 3.9 percent growth posted in the same period last year. But the rate of expansion of APEC as a whole has “moderated” as it inched up by only 0.1 percentage point in the first half of 2018 to 4.2 percent from 4.1 percent in July to December 2017.

“This slower increase in growth could be attributed to elevated uncertaint­y in the global economy,” the report said.

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