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950806
Asean scheme gets
mixed response
BANDAR SERI BEGAWAN, (Brunei): A call at the recent Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) meeting to speed up introduction of its free-trade area has received a mixed response with some industries saying they are not ready for fast-track trade liberalisation.
Sultan Sir Hassanal Bolkiah of Brunei opened the Asean foreign ministers meeting in Brunei early this month with a call to accelerate the creation of the Asean Free-Trade Area (AFTA) by three years from 2003 to 2000.
He proposed shortening the deadline for cutting tariffs to five percent under the Common Effective Preferential Tariff (CEPT) scheme from 2003 to 2000, saying the region has to take some risks if it is not to be left behind.
"Other regions are overtaking Asean in economic cooperation," he told the meeting.
The inclusion of Vietnam's 72 million people into Asean, increases its combined population to 420 million, larger than Europe or North America.
But Vietnam's admission was nearly derailed by a last-minute wrangle over the terms of its participation in AFTA. It was eventually granted a three-year grace period and will have to implement required tariff cuts by 2006.
The Sultan said the MERCOSUR group of South American countries -- Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay -- started to implement zero tariffs from January 1 this year.
"AFTA's goal to achieve this by 2003 is way behind MERCOSUR," he said.
He said he hoped Asean will be able to announce the completion of AFTA by 2000 at a summit in Bangkok in December.
"We have to take some risk with our overprotected domestic industries if we are not to be left behind," he said.
The CEPT scheme was originally aimed at establishing a free-trade zone by 2008 but Asean economic ministers agreed last year to speed up implementaion of the CEPT by five years.
Indonesian Industry Minister Tungky Ariwibowo said the proposal had to be studied very carefully while pointing out the idea came from Brunei, which has only a small industrial sector compared with Indonesia.
Asean hopes its ambitious AFTA scheme will not only facilitate intra-Asean trade but also attract more investment from abroad.-Reuter
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