Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation
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Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation | |
Formation | 1989 |
---|---|
Type | Economic forum |
Headquarters | Singapore |
Membership | 21 member economies |
Executive Director | Colin S. Heseltine![]() |
Website | http://www.apec.org/ |
The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) is an economic forum for a group of Pacific Rim countries to discuss matters on regional economy, cooperation, trade and investment. Ministers from the member economies meet on a continual basis throughout the year. The activities are coordinated by the APEC Secretariat based in Singapore.
The organization conducts the APEC Economic Leaders Meeting, an annual summit attended by the heads of government of all APEC members except Chinese Taipei, which is represented by a ministerial-level official. The location of the summit rotates annually among the member economies, and a famous tradition involves the attending leaders dressing in a national costume of the host member.
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[edit] History
In January 1989, Australian Prime Minister Bob Hawke called for more effective economic cooperation across the Asia Pacific region. This led to the first meeting of APEC in Canberra, Australia in November, chaired by Australian Foreign Affairs Minister Gareth Evans. Attended by political ministers from twelve countries, the meeting concluded with commitments for future annual meetings in Singapore and South Korea.
Malaysia initially opposed APEC membership for countries in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), and instead proposed the East Asia Economic Caucus, which would exclude countries such as the United States, Australia and New Zealand. The plan was opposed and strongly criticized by Japan and the United States.
The first APEC Economic Leaders' Meeting occurred in 1993, when United States President Bill Clinton invited the heads of government from member economies to a summit on Blake Island, believing it would help bring the stalled Uruguay Round of trade talks on track. At the summit, leaders called for continued reduction of barriers trade and investment, envisioning a community in the Asia-Pacific region that promotes prosperity through cooperation. The APEC Secretariat was established in Singapore to coordinate the activities of the organization.
In the summit of 1994 in Bogor, APEC adopted the Bogor Goals that aimed to reduce trade tariffs to below five percent in the Asia-Pacific region, by 2010 for industrialized economies and by 2020 for developing economies. In 1995, APEC established a business advisory body named the APEC Business Advisory Council (ABAC), comprised of three business executives from each member economy.
[edit] Membership
The current membership of APEC consists of 21 members, which includes most countries with a coastline on the Pacific Ocean. By convention, APEC uses the term member economy to refer to one of its members.
Founding members from the first ministerial meeting in Canberra, November 1989:
Australia,
Brunei,
Canada,
Indonesia,
Japan,
Malaysia,
New Zealand,
Philippines,
Singapore,
South Korea,
Thailand,
United States
Joined on the third ministerial meeting in Seoul, November 1991:
People's Republic of China,
Hong Kong, China,
Chinese Taipei
The People's Republic of China represents the interests of mainland China only, since Hong Kong and Macau are considered separate economies. Hong Kong joined APEC in 1991 during British administration with the name "Hong Kong." In 1997, Hong Kong became a special administrative region of the People's Republic of China and took the name "Hong Kong, China." Due to the insistence of the People's Republic of China, the Republic of China on Taiwan does not use the names "Republic of China" or "Taiwan", but is instead referred to as Chinese Taipei within the organization. The President of the Republic of China does not attend the annual APEC Economic Leaders' Meeting, instead a ministerial-level official responsible for economic affairs is sent as the representative (See List of Chinese Taipei Representatives to APEC).
Joined on the first leaders' summit in Seattle, November 1993:
Mexico,
Papua New Guinea
Joined on the second leaders' summit in Bogor, November 1994:
Chile
Joined on the sixth leaders' summit in Kuala Lumpur, November 1998:
Peru,
Russia,
Vietnam
India has requested memebership in APEC, and received initial support from the United States, Japan[1] and Australia. Officials from the member economies are in the process of discussing whether to allow India to join.[2]
Guam has also been actively seeking a separate membership, citing the example of Hong Kong, but the request is opposed by the United States, which currently represents Guam.
[edit] APEC annual meetings
Since its formation in 1989, APEC has held annual meetings with representatives from all member economies. The first four annual meetings were attended by ministerial-level officials. Beginning in 1993, the annual meetings are named APEC Economic Leaders Meetings and are attended by the heads of government from all member economies except Chinese Taipei, which is represented by a ministerial-level official. The location of the summit is rotated annually among the members. As a tradition, the leaders attending the summit participate in a photo op in which they dress in a costume that reflects the culture of the host member.
The Deputy Executive Director is a diplomatic representative from the member economy that will host the following year's annual meeting.
[edit] Summit developments
In 1997, the APEC summit was held in Vancouver. Controversy arose after officers of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police used force and pepper spray against non-violent protesters. The protesters objected to the presence of autocratic leaders such as Indonesian President Suharto[3][4][5][6][7][8].
At the 2001 summit in Shanghai, APEC leaders pushed for a new round of trade negotiations and support for a program of trade capacity-building assistance, leading to the successful launch of the Doha Development Agenda a few weeks later. Leaders also endorsed the Shanghai Accord proposed by the United States, emphasizing the implementation of open markets, structural reform, and capacity building. As part of the accord, leaders committed to develop and implement APEC transparency standards, reduce trade transaction costs in the Asia-Pacific region by 5 percent over 5 years, and pursue trade liberalization policies relating to information technology goods and services.
In 2003, Jemaah Islamiah leader Riduan Isamuddin had planned to attack the APEC summit to be held in Bangkok in October. He was captured in the city of Ayutthaya, Thailand by Thai police on August 11, 2003, before he could finish planning the attack.
Chile became the first South American nation to host the summit in 2004. The agenda of that year was focused on terrorism and commerce, small and medium enterprise development, and contemplation of Free Trade Agreements and Regional Trade Agreements.
The 2005 summit was held in Busan, South Korea. The meeting focused on the Doha round of World Trade Organization (WTO) negotiations, leading up to the WTO Ministerial Conference of 2005 held in Hong Kong in December. Weeks earlier, trade negotiations in Paris were held between several WTO members, including the United States and the European Union, centered on reducing agricultural trade barriers. APEC leaders at the summit urged the European Union to agree to reducing farm subsidies. Peaceful protests against APEC were staged in Busan, but the summit schedule was not affected.
At the summit held on November 19, 2006 in Hanoi, APEC leaders called for a new start to global free-trade negotiations while condemning terrorism and other threats to security. APEC also criticized North Korea for conducting a nuclear test and a missile test launch that year, urging the country to take "concrete and effective" steps toward nuclear disarmament. Concerns about nuclear proliferation in the region was discussed in addition to economic topics. The United States and Russia signed an agreement as part of Russia's bid to join the World Trade Organization.
[edit] References
- ^ APEC 'too busy' for free trade deal, says Canberra
- ^ India's membership issue
- ^ Pue, W. Wesley (2000). Pepper in our Eyes: the APEC Affair. Vancouver, Canada: UBC Press. ISBN 0-7748-0779-2.
- ^ Wallace, Bruce. "APEC Protest Controversy", Maclean's via The Canadian Encylopedia, Historica Foundation of Canada, September 21, 1998. Retrieved on 2006-09-06.
- ^ Nuttall-Smith, Chris. "APEC summit gets nasty at UBC", Varsity News, Varsity Publications, Inc., November 27, 1997. Retrieved on 2006-09-06.
- ^ Schmidt, Sarah. "Student protesters fight back for civil rights", Varsity News, Varsity Publications, Inc., January 6, 1998. Retrieved on 2006-09-06.
- ^ British Columbia Civil Liberties Association (BCCLA) (November 23, 1997). Civil rights group denounces attack on UBC students' APEC protests. Press release. Retrieved on 2006-09-06.
- ^ British Columbia Civil Liberties Association (BCCLA) (November 25, 1997). Student member of BCCLA executive arrested!. Press release. Retrieved on 2006-09-06.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation, official organization Web site
- APEC 2007, official Web site for the 2007 annual meeting
- Congressional Research Service (CRS) Reports regarding APEC
Australia • Brunei Darussalam • Canada • Chile • People's Republic of China • Hong Kong, China • Indonesia • Japan • Republic of Korea • Malaysia • Mexico • New Zealand • Papua New Guinea • Peru • Philippines • Russia • Singapore • Chinese Taipei (Republic of China) • Thailand • United States • Viet Nam