APEC
Asia Pacific Economic Co-operation
Group:14
Rohit Jhanwar (113)
Vinay Rachh (132)
Namita Sachan (134)
APEC
APEC is the premier forum for facilitating
economic growth, cooperation, trade and
investment in the Asia-Pacific region
History
1989, Prime Minister BobHawke called for
economic cooperation across the Pacific region. This
led to the first meeting of APEC in Canberra
The first APEC Economic Leaders' Meeting
occurred in 1993 when US president Bill Clinton,
after discussions with Australian prime minister Paul
Keating, invited the heads of government from
member economies to a summit
Birth of APEC
APEC begins as an informal Ministerial-level
dialogue group with 12 members
12 founding members:
Australia, New Zealand
6 ASEAN economies
Japan and South Korea
Canada and the United States
APEC’S VISION
“A community of Asia-Pacific economies, based on the
spirit of openness and partnership which would make
cooperative efforts to:
Address the challenges of change
Reduce barriers to trade and investment to enable free
flow of goods, services and capital
Work towards broadly based economic growth, higher
living and educational standards and sustainable
growth that respects the environment”
Membership
Australia China (1991)
Brunei Darussalam Chinese Taipei (1991)
Canada Hong Kong, China (1991)
Indonesia Mexico (1993)
Japan Papua New Guinea (1993)
Republic of Korea Chile (1994)
Malaysia Peru (1998)
New Zealand Russia (1998)
Philippines Viet Nam (1998)
Singapore
Thailand
United States of America
APEC Members
APEC has 21 “member economies”
a population of over 2.6 billion
more than 1/3 of the world’s population
a combined GDP of 21 trillion US dollars
57% of world GDP
accounting for 46 percent of world trade
Host Economy
Every year one of the 21 member economies
Plays host to APEC meetings
Serves as the APEC Chair
Chairs the annual
▪ Economic Leaders’ Meeting
▪ Ministerial Meetings
Fills Executive Director of the APEC Secretariat
APEC Structure
Leaders’ Meetings
Held annually since 1993
1993, Blake Island, Seattle, US
APEC Leaders Economic Vision Statement
“Bogor Goals”
APEC
Economic Leaders' Declaration Of
Common Resolve (1994)
Freeand open trade and investment in the
Asia-Pacific
by 2010 for developed economies
by 2020 for developing economies
“Three Pillars”
3specific areas crucial to achieving the Bogor
Goals:
Trade and investment liberalization
Business facilitation
Economic and technical cooperation
“Three Pillars”
Trade and investment liberalization
reducing and eliminating tariff
reducing and eliminating non-tariff barriers to trade
and investment
opening markets
Business facilitation
Economic and technical cooperation
“Three Pillars”
Trade and investment liberalization
Business facilitation
reducing the costs of business transactions
improving access to trade information
bringing into line policy and business strategies to
facilitate growth
free and open trade
Economic and technical cooperation
“Three Pillars”
Trade and investment liberalization
Business facilitation
Economic and technical cooperation
assisting member economies build the necessary
capacities to take advantage of global trade and the
New Economy
Role of APEC
INTEGRATION “AT THE BORDER”
Building Towards a Possible Free Trade Area of the
Asia-Pacific
Improving Customs Transparency to Facilitate
Trade
Facilitating Cross-Border Trade in Services
Role of APEC
INTEGRATION “BEHIND THE BORDER”
Improving Ease of Doing Business
Facilitating Investment
Supporting Infrastructure Development
Strengthening Intellectual Property Rights
Role of APEC
INTEGRATION “ACROSS THE BORDER”
Measuring Improvements in Trade Facilitation
Securing Regional Trade
Building Trade Recovery Capabilities
Strengthening Digital Economy and Information
Networks
Impact on International Business
Reduction in trade barriers from 16.9%(1989)
to 5.5%(2004)
TFAP II to reduce transaction cost by 5% from
2007-10
Single window strategic plan
APEC business travel card
Refrences
www.apec.org
www.wikipedia.org
Thank you…