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Phnom Penh.
Southeast Asian nations must redouble efforts to bridge development gaps which
threaten the region’s efforts to create an EU-style single market, Cambodia’s
prime minister said Monday.
Building an
Asean economic community by 2015 is the “top priority,” Hun Sen said as he
opened the annual meeting of economic ministers from the Association of
Southeast Asian Nations in the Cambodian tourist hub of Siem Reap.
Emulating
the European Union’s example, Asean wants to establish a single market and
manufacturing base of about 600 million people — a goal that has been spurred
by intensifying competition from China and India.
With less
than three years to go, Asean must “address challenges and bridge the
development gap, which hinders the realization of (the) Asean Economic
Community as planned,” said Hun Sen, according to an official translation.
The
development gap among Asean nations “is still huge,” he said. The bloc’s 10
member states range from deeply impoverished Myanmar to advanced city state
Singapore and emerging powerhouse Indonesia.
“This
requires us to double our efforts to promote further growth and improve
equitable distribution of the fruits of growth at both national and regional
levels,” Hun Sen said.
In a step
towards narrowing the gap between richer and poorer nations and achieving
regional integration, the bloc last year set up a nearly $500 million Asean
infrastructure fund offering loans to build roads, railways and other projects
without direct foreign assistance.
But
according to Hun Sen, whose country currently holds the Asean chair, the fund
“is still very small.”
He urged
the bloc’s economic and finance ministers “to attract more financing partners
to increase the fund size” by approaching dialogue partners such as Japan,
China, South Korea.
Asean
economies grew by 4.7 percent in 2011, Hun Sen said, despite the weak global
economy, high oil prices and volatile capital flows.
The figure
was down from 7.6 percent growth in 2010, according to Asean data.
Despite a
slowdown in exports, Asean countries posted a combined trade surplus of more
than $90 billion in 2011, Hun Sen said.
Asean
groups Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines,
Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.
During
their week-long meeting, the economic ministers will also seek to deepen
economic engagement in talks with other nations including China, the United
States, Russia and India.
The meeting
marks the first gathering of Asean members since a foreign ministers’ meeting
in July ended in disarray over a maritime dispute in the South China Sea,
exposing deep divisions within the bloc.
Agence France-Presse

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