APEC Joint Ministerial Statement
ELEVENTH APEC MINISTERIAL MEETING
JOINT
STATEMENT
AUCKLAND, NEW ZEALAND
9-10 SEPTEMBER
1999
Ministers from Australia; Brunei Darussalam; Canada;
Chile; the People¡¦s Republic of China; Hong Kong, China;
Indonesia; Japan; the Republic of Korea; Malaysia; Mexico;
New Zealand; Papua New Guinea; Peru; the Republic of the
Philippines; Russia; Singapore; Chinese Taipei; Thailand;
the United States of America; and Viet Nam participated in
the Eleventh Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC)
Ministerial Meeting in Auckland, New Zealand on 9-10
September 1999. The APEC Secretariat was present. The
Association of South-east Asian Nations (ASEAN) Secretariat,
the Pacific Economic Cooperation Council (PECC) and the
South Pacific Forum attended as observers.
2 The meeting
was chaired by the Rt Hon Don McKinnon, Minister of Foreign
Affairs and Trade, and the Hon Dr Lockwood Smith, Minister
of International Trade, of New Zealand. The agenda of the
meeting was structured to reflect the three themes of APEC
99:
„h expanding opportunities for business around the
region;
„h strengthening the functioning of markets; and
„h broadening support for APEC.
Theme 1: Expanding
Opportunities for Business around the Region
Individual
Action Plans
3 Ministers reaffirmed the central role of
Individual Action Plans (IAPs) in delivering liberalisation,
facilitation and reform under the APEC process. In 1999,
both APEC members individually and the Pacific Economic
Cooperation Council reviewed Individual Action Plans to
gauge progress made since 1996 towards achieving the Bogor
goals of free and open trade and investment. Both reviews
showed that progress was occurring under the IAP mechanism
in terms of each of the areas covered by the Osaka Action
Agenda (OAA) with little backsliding evident. At the same
time, Ministers agreed that the reviews had shown that the
IAP mechanism could be improved and directed that a
programme of work be carried out in 2000 to:
„h improve
the transparency of IAPs (including the streamlining of
reporting requirements);
„h develop improved guidelines
for use by member economies to show how they intended to
achieve the Bogor Goals;
„h develop means by which the
OAA guidelines might be better defined in areas where this
is required.
4 Ministers directed that the work
programme on the IAP mechanism be conducted in conjunction
with the review of Collective Action Plans. They agreed that
the Committee on Trade and Investment should take a leading
role. Ministers emphasised the need for member economies to
consult closely with business, including the APEC Business
Advisory Council (ABAC) in developing the work programme.
They noted ABAC¡¦s view that business is looking to the
developed economies to take a lead in the APEC process and
show clearly how the Bogor goals are going to be achieved.
5 Ministers welcomed the submission this year by five
economies - Australia, Brunei Darussalam, Japan, the
Philippines and the United States - of their IAPs to
voluntary peer review by other APEC members, and welcomed
the offers by a further five members - Indonesia, Mexico,
Peru, Singapore and Thailand - to do so next year. Ministers
agreed that IAP peer reviews were becoming increasingly
useful and valued and that APEC should seek to raise the
profile and increase the rigour of the peer review process.
Ministers directed officials, as part of next year¡¦s work
programme, to look at conducting regular peer reviews for
member economies on a voluntary basis.
1999 Individual
Action Plans
6 Ministers welcomed the submission of
improved 1999 IAPs and commended the efforts which member
economies are making to respond to the recommendations of
ABAC. Ministers highlighted a number of improvements
reported by members which illustrate the real changes
underway in many economies: eighteen members have
implemented significant tariff reductions; twelve have made
improvements in the area of non-tariff measures; seventeen
have further liberalised their investment regimes (in some
cases drawing on APEC¡¦s menu of options for investment
liberalisation and business facilitation); eighteen report
improvements in the areas of competition
policy/deregulation; and there were significant advances
reported in the areas of intellectual property rights,
services, standards and conformance, customs procedures and
the mobility of business people. The 1999 IAPs are available
on the APEC Secretariat website.
Collective Action
Plans
7 Ministers endorsed the 1999 Committee on Trade
and Investment (CTI) Annual Report and commended the
progress the CTI has made this year in implementing APEC¡¦s
Collective Action Plans (CAPs). Emphasising the importance
of the CAPs to boosting trade and investment flows through
lowering transaction costs for business, Ministers
highlighted the following key achievements:
„h APEC
Principles to Enhance Competition and Regulatory Reform
(which are non-binding);
„h Non-binding Principles on
Government Procurement;
„h an APEC Mutual Recognition
Arrangement on Electrical and Electronic Equipment.
8
Ministers endorsed the priority which will be given in the
CTI¡¦s 2000 work programme to broadening and deepening
APEC¡¦s CAPs, for example in services, and to consideration
of possible new areas to be included.
9 Ministers
expressed their appreciation for the contribution of
Ambassador Edsel Custodio of the Philippines as CTI Chair
over the past two years, and welcomed the appointment of Mr
Joe Damond of the United States as his successor.
Trade
and Investment Facilitation
10 APEC¡¦s trade and
investment facilitation work has played a critical role in
improving conditions for business in the APEC region. It has
helped business save time and money. It has responded to
business¡¦ calls for less paperwork, simplified procedures
and easier access to information. Improved facilitation has
provided internet access to essential market information and
introduced greater consistency and certainty in legal and
regulatory frameworks in the region. Highlights of key trade
facilitation achievements for APEC to date are included in
the attached annex.
11 Noting that APEC¡¦s voluntarist
and cooperative approach makes it well suited to advancing
facilitation work, Ministers directed that work in this area
should be intensified. They instructed officials to consider
the proposal by Hong Kong, China on development of APEC
principles on trade facilitation. APEC¡¦s trade facilitation
work is not well known and future outreach efforts will be
required in order to improve business and community
understanding.
12 Ministers welcomed the success of the
first APEC Investment Mart held in Seoul 3-5 June. They
agreed that stimulating the flow of investment in the region
was critical to long-term recovery. They thanked China for
its offer to host the Second APEC Investment Mart in 2001.
APEC Food System
13 Recalling the instruction of
Leaders in Kuala Lumpur that Ministers study ABAC¡¦s
proposal for an APEC Food System, Ministers welcomed the SOM
report and endorsed its recommendations to Leaders.
Ministers recognised that building a robust regional food
system that efficiently links together food production, food
processing and consumption to meet the food needs of our
people is an essential part of achieving sustainable growth,
equitable development and stability in the APEC region.
Ministers emphasised the importance of addressing the three
areas of rural infrastructure development, promotion of
trade in food products and dissemination of technological
advances in food production and processing.
APEC and the
WTO
14 Ministers agreed that their meeting was an
historic opportunity for APEC to contribute to the
successful launch of a new Round of WTO negotiations. They
reaffirmed their commitment to open regionalism and to the
multilateral trading system, underlining the critical
importance of the forthcoming WTO negotiations in
liberalising trade and investment within the region and in
encouraging growth in the global economy.
15 Ministers
stressed the importance of ensuring full implementation of
existing WTO agreements. They encouraged an acceleration in
the accession negotiations of non-WTO APEC members in
accordance with WTO rules, based on commercially viable
market access commitments and a balance of rights and
obligations. They supported an agreement that all acceding
economies will participate in some capacity in the
forthcoming negotiations.
16 Ministers welcomed the
agreement reached by APEC Ministers Responsible for Trade in
June that the forthcoming WTO negotiations should encompass
industrial tariffs, in addition to the already mandated
negotiation on the built-in agenda, principally agriculture
and services.
17 They agreed in addition that the agenda
for the negotiations be balanced and sufficiently
broad-based to respond to the interests of all economies;
and confirmed the negotiations should conclude within three
years.
18 They agreed that negotiations should deliver
timely and effective market access for all participating
economies, in particular developing economies, as well as
provide scope to review and strengthen rules and disciplines
consistent with this objective; and that the negotiations on
those issues agreed at Seattle for inclusion in the
three-year negotiation should be structured so that the
outcomes are finalised, bound and fully implemented as a
single package.
19 Ministers agreed that the concerns of
developing economies should be addressed through enhanced
attention to the effective implementation of special and
differential treatment and ongoing support for capacity
building and technical assistance, so as to facilitate their
ability to participate fully in the WTO.
20 They agreed
that, consistent with its support for the principle of
special and differential treatment in the negotiations, APEC
supports development and other dimensions in which the APEC
concept of differential timing for the achievement of free
trade is one useful means of meeting developing economy
concerns.
21 They agreed also on the importance of
achieving early progress on improved market access for goods
and services from least developed economies in the
forthcoming WTO negotiations.
22 Ministers supported an
extension to the current moratorium on duties on electronic
commerce transactions, to be agreed at Seattle. They also
supported efforts to reach an agreement on transparency in
government procurement at Seattle. They noted interest in
facilitation of trade but that further discussion, including
on details of the scope of the work proposed, was required
before agreement can be reached on how to proceed.
23
They agreed to continue work on all other areas which have
been raised in proposals in Geneva, as outlined in the
provisional list attached and any further proposals which
may be tabled, in order to determine at Seattle how they
should be treated.
24 With regard to the negotiations on
agriculture, they agreed, as recommended in the APEC Food
System Report to Leaders, that APEC would actively and
constructively participate in the forthcoming WTO
negotiations on agriculture to consider tariffs and
non-tariff measures further in the context of Article 20 of
the WTO¡¦s Agreement on Agriculture and convey to the WTO
membership APEC¡¦s support for the abolition of agricultural
export subsidies and unjustifiable export prohibitions and
restrictions.
25 As a potential contribution to
comprehensive services negotiations they noted APEC¡¦s
demonstrated expertise, including in areas such as
transportation, tourism, environmental and energy services.
26 Ministers of participating economies agreed that the
APEC Accelerated Tariff Liberalisation initiative was adding
impetus to the preparations for the comprehensive WTO
negotiation on industrial (non-agricultural) tariffs. They
noted progress towards the achievement of a critical mass of
support for the initiative in the WTO and agreed that the
initiative should continue to be progressed endeavouring to
conclude agreement in the WTO in 1999. They further agreed
that participating economies should continue to engage with
WTO members with the objective of realising the ATL package
on the basis of critical mass, based on APEC¡¦s EVSL
initiative agreed by Ministers in Kuala Lumpur, by the end
of next year . They also agreed that implementation should
be undertaken on a provisional basis with full and final
binding as part of the conclusion of the single
package.
27 Ministers agreed that support for and
consultation among APEC economies about ongoing WTO
negotiations should remain a key area of APEC¡¦s work
throughout the course of negotiations.
Early Voluntary
Sectoral Liberalisation (EVSL)
28 Ministers welcomed
progress on implementing the non-tariff measures,
facilitation and Ecotech elements of the EVSL initiative,
and agreed a further set of initiatives in 1999, which is
attached as Annex B, as part of the regular work of the
relevant fora. Ministers requested reports on the outcome of
these projects during 2000.
Theme 2: Strengthening the
Functioning of Markets
29 The pace of globalisation and
the scope and depth of the economic crisis have underscored
the need for policy responses that provide for efficient,
flexible and competitive markets in the APEC region. Trade
and investment liberalisation is a central and indispensable
element. But the agenda is much broader. As the economic
crisis has underlined, reforms in other public sector
policies, corporate governance and financial systems are
crucial. Business facilitation and capacity building are
also required.
30 "Strengthening markets" provides an
integrative framework that can bring together APEC¡¦s work
in key areas such as trade and investment, competition and
regulatory reform and capacity building, with a view to
generating sustained growth in APEC economies. Ministers
endorsed for referral to Leaders APEC Principles to Enhance
Competition and Regulatory Reform which provide a critical
policy underpinning to the strengthening markets
framework.
31 In addition, Ministers agreed to a "road
map" that sets out future work by APEC to strengthen markets
in the region. Specific elements include:
„h individual
and collective implementation of the APEC Principles to
Enhance Competition and Regulatory Reform;
„h continued
work in the areas of economic and corporate governance
(including through the APEC Finance Ministers¡¦ process);
„h application of the strengthening markets framework to
APEC¡¦s work on economic and technical cooperation (with
APEC projects in the area of public sector management and
human resource development for structural reform already
having been agreed); APEC will seek to develop other such
ecotech projects in support of institutional strengthening
and capacity-building efforts which are prerequisites for
the strengthening of markets;
„h work to strengthen
market infrastructure, in particular in the area of legal
infrastructure and the development of small and medium
enterprises and new businesses;
„h development of
APEC¡¦s analytical work to support APEC efforts to
strengthen markets;
„h an intensification of effort in
trade facilitation, with a focus on tangible outcomes for
business;
„h ensuring the "work programme to improve the
IAP mechanism" takes into account the strengthening markets
policy framework and in particular the APEC Principles to
Enhance Competition and Regulatory Reform;
„h
application of strengthening markets principles by
implementing specific areas of APEC¡¦s work, including
electronic commerce, air services and energy.
32
Ministers welcomed continued progress on the Natural Gas
Initiative and the Best Practices for Independent Power
Producers as useful strengthening markets initiatives in the
energy sector. These measures would help spur economic
activity worth tens of billions of dollars and significantly
reduce the risks and costs of investment in energy
infrastructure. Ministers encouraged continued cooperation
with the private sector on this initiative.
Economic and
Technical Cooperation
33 Ministers endorsed the SOM 1999
report on Economic and Technical Cooperation while noting
that APEC efforts to build capacity and strengthen
institutions were critical to a return to sustainable growth
in the region. Such efforts are needed to complement and
support the range of other policies required to strengthen
markets, and to enhance the capacity for long-term growth
and development in APEC.
34 Ministers agreed that
efforts to strengthen economic and technical cooperation
under the Manila Framework for Strengthening Economic
Cooperation and Development should be intensified. In this
respect, the appointment of coordinators to review progress
under the Manila Framework was a highly welcome development.
Ministers endorsed the work programmes put forward by the
respective coordinators: China on Harnessing Technologies
for the Future; Korea on Encouraging the Growth of Small and
Medium Enterprises; and Canada on Developing Human
Capital.
35 Ministers also agreed to:
„h establish an
Ecotech Clearing House to enhance information flows between
the identification of ecotech needs and the capacity to
provide appropriate expertise to meet those needs. The
Clearing House will be implemented from January 2000;
„h
endorse an Ecotech Weightings Matrix to assist APEC in its
evaluation of ecotech project proposals.
36 Ministers
strongly reaffirmed the need for ongoing priority to be
accorded to key APEC initiatives: the Kuala Lumpur Action
Plan in Skills Development and the Agenda for Science and
Technology Cooperation into the 21st Century. They welcomed
the activities occurring in both these areas. Ministers
restated their commitment to ensuring that development
occurred in an environmentally sustainable fashion and
welcomed the report on APEC activities on sustainable
development that had been provided by the APEC Secretariat.
They enclosed the Partnership Marketing Meeting approach to
ensure sustainability of the marine environment and promote
business opportunities.
37 Ministers welcomed the
numerous initiatives being pursued by individual member
economies, including: the APEC Centre for Entrepreneurship
established in Indonesia; the APEC Youth Skills Camp to be
held in Korea in September 2000; Australia¡¦s Economic and
Financial Management Initiative; China¡¦s Science and
Technology Industry Cooperation Fund and China¡¦s APEC
Enterprises Assembly, and agreed that such individual
actions contribute usefully to APEC economic and technical
cooperation.
38 Ministers thanked Ambassador Lozoya of
Mexico and expressed appreciation for his work as Chair of
the Ecotech Sub-committee. They welcomed Dr Medhi Krongkaew
of Thailand as the new Chair.
39 Ministers agreed that
demonstrating the benefits of economic and technical
cooperation activities should form a part of APEC¡¦s future
communications and outreach work programmes. These
activities are often of greatest benefit to the poorest
sections of society and it was important to increase support
for them throughout APEC as a whole.
Economic
Committee
40 Ministers welcomed and endorsed the Economic
Committee¡¦s Annual Report, noting that the report confirmed
the considerable progress made by the Committee in
responding to its revised mandate. The APEC Economic Outlook
confirms that the regional recovery is now underway with
economies most affected by the crisis recording a rapid
return to growth. This is particularly encouraging. But APEC
cooperation on structural reform is critical for
consolidating the basis for growth in the 21st century. This
is the key message of the Committee¡¦s progress report on
the 1999-2000 project APEC Economies Beyond the Asian
Crisis. Opening markets also matters to long term growth as
is made clear in the Committee¡¦s report Assessing APEC
Trade Liberalisation and Facilitation. Finally the report
highlights valuable work being done by the Economic
Committee in the area of Knowledge-Based Industries, with
the intention of making its final report on this project a
major deliverable for APEC in 2000.
Electronic
Commerce
41 Electronic commerce has the potential to
provide an extraordinary stimulus to regional growth and
trade. The private sector has the key role in driving change
and innovation, and the primary role of the public sector is
to ensure a favourable regulatory environment for e-commerce
to flourish. Economies should pay particular attention to
the needs of consumers and small business. To this end
Ministers:
„h encouraged economies to take advantage of
the self-assessment tool for e-commerce readiness to be
developed by officials and the private sector, and tasked
officials to further refine the assessment tool and report
back next year;
„h directed officials to develop
effective data and indicators of e-commerce uptake in APEC
economies;
„h encouraged economies to consider the
UNCITRAL model law in developing their regulatory
frameworks;
„h instructed officials to initiate work on
consumer protection, focussing on information sharing,
benchmarking and best practices;
„h directed officials
to develop an APEC-wide plan to support use of e-commerce by
small and medium enterprises.
42 Ministers accorded high
priority to the targets, stipulated in the Blueprint for
Action on Electronic Commerce, for achieving paperless
trading, where possible, by 2005 for developed economies and
2010 for developing economies, or as soon as possible
thereafter, and instructed officials to increase their
efforts to achieve these targets, and to report to Ministers
Responsible for Trade at their next meeting in 2000.
Ministers welcomed proposals from Japan to host an APEC
E-commerce Convention and an E-commerce leaders¡¦ seminar
and by Brunei Darussalam and Japan to co-host a Workshop on
e-commerce in June next year.
Y2K Issues
43 All APEC
economies have an important stake in the region¡¦s state of
Y2K preparedness. With the new millennium just over 100 days
away, strengthening cooperation among APEC economies is of
the utmost urgency. Ministers recognise the critical
importance of improving regional preparations across borders
to ensure continuity of economic activity through to 2000.
They welcomed ongoing efforts in APEC economies and called
on APEC to accelerate activities focused on readiness
preparedness, risk assessment and contingency planning.
Ministers endorsed the recommendations of Senior Officials
to bolster plans to minimise potential disruptions through
continued information exchange, public disclosure,
confidence building measures, enhanced engagement with
business, the public and technical agencies, and cooperation
on risk assessment and mitigation. They stressed that the
time remaining must be used to plan for responding to
potential disruptions emphasising the electricity, maritime
shipping and health sectors. APEC economies will continue
coordination across sectors and across borders to determine
priorities for the remaining 100 days. Ministers emphasised
the urgent priority of bolstering global arrangements for
responding to potential Y2K failures.
44 Ministers also
welcomed the many cooperative activities already being
undertaken within APEC, led by Australia, Canada, Japan,
Singapore and the United States, in three main areas:
„h
information exchange and preparedness assessment including:
the APEC Y2K Symposium and the APEC Y2K week, both held in
April; the establishment of an APEC Y2K website; networks of
Y2K contact points; and a questionnaire on readiness in key
sectors;
„h cross-border contingency planning including
Y2K risk assessment tool kit and contingency planning
workshops being held in Thailand (September), Peru (October)
and Korea (November);
„h intensive exchange of knowledge
and know-how in critical sectors: an energy sector meeting
(Tokyo 27-28 September 1999).
Biotechnology
45
Recognising the important contribution biotechnology can
make in expanding agricultural production and noting the
recommendations of the SOM Chair¡¦s Report on ABAC¡¦s
proposal for an APEC Food System, Ministers affirmed the
importance of transparent and science-based approaches to
the introduction and use of biotechnology products, and of
technical cooperation, exchanging information on new
technology, and capacity building in this area. Such
activity should take into account WTO rules, as well as
consumers¡¦ interest in food safety, environmental quality,
and facilitate the realisation of the potential benefits of
this technology. Ministers requested that the Agricultural
Technical Cooperation Experts Group (ATC) report on the work
already done in this area, along with any plans or
recommendations for future work and take into account
studies being conducted in other international fora, for
review by the SOM next year and discussion by Ministers
Responsible for Trade at their June 2000 meeting.
Theme
3: Broadening Support for APEC
46 The need for more
effective communication and engagement with communities has
been an overarching theme in APEC this year. Ministers
emphasised the importance of specific outreach activities,
both in terms of building greater understanding of APEC¡¦s
goals, and ensuring that participation by our communities in
economic activities is as wide as possible.
Framework for
the Integration of Women in APEC
47 Ministers recognised
the continuing impediments to the full participation of
women in regional economic activity, and agreed that APEC
should address barriers to women¡¦s participation in
business, the workforce, education and leadership. They
acknowledged the unique potential contribution of indigenous
women.
48 As a first step in addressing these
impediments, and in including women¡¦s economic interests in
the formulation of APEC goals for growth and development,
Ministers welcomed and endorsed for referral to Leaders the
Framework for the Integration of Women in APEC. They agreed
to the recommendations from Senior Officials, including the
establishment of an Ad Hoc Advisory Group, and looked
forward to a first report on implementation of the Framework
at their next meeting. Ministers welcomed parallel efforts
to broaden women¡¦s involvement in APEC, including the Women
Leaders¡¦ Network meeting on 21-23 June, and the Indigenous
Women in Exporting Business Seminar on 18-20 June, both held
in Wellington.
Communicating the Impact of Trade
Liberalisation
49 Ministers committed to expand their
efforts to build community understanding of APEC¡¦s goals,
especially the benefits of a more open and integrated
regional economy. They welcomed the report Making Trade and
Investment Liberalisation Relevant: Designing and
Implementing Effective Strategies for Communicating with
APEC Economies, and agreed to make use of its research in
designing communications strategies in their own economies.
They accepted the need for messages to be realistic, free of
jargon and relevant to people¡¦s individual interests.
Ministers asked officials to report at their next meeting on
communication initiatives undertaken by individual economies
and to consider the possibility of further APEC-wide
activities in this area.
Social Impact
50 The economic
crisis has taken a heavy toll on the poorer and more
vulnerable sectors of our societies and set back poverty
alleviation programmes throughout the region. Ministers
welcomed the wide range and scope of activities underway, in
APEC and other fora. These activities are directed at three
main areas:
„h improving members¡¦ understanding of the
social impacts of the crisis through, research and analysis
on the part of APEC officials, the World Bank and the Asian
Development Bank; the establishment of the Asia Recovery
Information Centre; and Australia¡¦s survey on the effect of
the crisis on children and implications for social safety
nets.
„h responding to social needs through technical
and capacity-building cooperation, targetting of bilateral
development programmes to address social impacts, and
significant new multilateral assistance efforts directed to
the social sector;
„h building the capacity of members
in the area of social safety nets and exploring ways of
strengthening social safety nets in a framework integrating
poverty reduction into growth-oriented macroeconomic
policies.
51 Ministers agreed on the high priority of
further work in this area. They encouraged greater
coordination of activities among APEC fora including by the
Human Resource Development Working Group and the Economic
Committee. Ministers requested these bodies to report in
2000 on work aimed at strengthening social safety nets in
the region and at better understanding the social impact of
the crisis. They urged even closer cooperation between APEC
and other appropriate international agencies, and the
substantive bilateral assistance programmes of individual
economies. Ministers stressed that the success of policies
and programmes aimed at addressing the social impact of
economic crises depends upon the full involvement of the
public, private and voluntary sectors. Ministers noted
Thailand¡¦s proposal for an APEC Social Infrastructure
Facility and welcomed the interest expressed by some
economies in pursuing this idea initially on a unilateral
basis. They also welcomed Thailand¡¦s plan to hold an APEC
Seminar on Pension Fund Reform in March 2000 as has been
proposed by APEC Finance Ministers.
Business
Participation
52 Ministers recognised the need to liaise
increasingly closely with the business community if outcomes
useful to business were to be achieved through the APEC
process. They welcomed the holding of business events in
parallel with Ministerial meetings, such as the Business
Forum held alongside the SME Ministerial and the Trade
Roundtable held in conjunction with the Meeting of APEC
Ministers Responsible for Trade. Ministers also participated
in the June Women Leaders Network Meeting. Such events
maximised the opportunities for direct contact between
Ministers and the business community. Ministers welcomed the
deepening of the dialogue with ABAC and urged ABAC to
broaden its direct contact with key APEC bodies. They noted
with interest ABAC¡¦s 1999 recommendations to Leaders.
Management Review
53 Ministers endorsed the SOM
Chair¡¦s Report on the second year of the three year review
of APEC¡¦s management process, led jointly by Malaysia, New
Zealand and Brunei Darussalam. Ministers stressed that the
purpose of the review is to achieve the increased efficiency
and effectiveness of the APEC process, commended the work
which all APEC fora put into the management review during
1999, and welcomed the measures which Senior Officials and
the Budget and Management Committee have taken to improve
management procedures. Ministers welcomed the change in
timing of the 2000 APEC Finance Ministers¡¦ meeting which
will result in better alignment of all the key annual APEC
Ministerial meetings, and directed Senior Officials to
explore further ways of improving coordination with the work
of the APEC Finance Deputies. The expansion of the APEC work
programme has resulted in increased financial and personnel
burdens for all member economies. The work programme must
remain manageable and focussed on productive outcomes.
Ministers requested that the final report which Senior
Officials submit in November 2000 on the management review
process include recommendations on criteria for the
establishment of new APEC fora.
Other Issues
54
Ministers welcomed the outcomes of the sectoral Ministerial
Meetings held this year on Finance, Trade, Small and Medium
Enterprises and Human Resource Development. They noted that
work in the areas of Small and Medium Enterprises and Human
Resource Development in particular is likely to continue to
be a priority for APEC. Ministers welcomed the follow-up
activity underway in the form of the APEC Consumer Education
and Protection Initiative and encouraged other economies to
follow Thailand¡¦s lead to advance consumer protection.
Ministers also welcomed Japan¡¦s offer to host a Human
Resource Development Ministerial Meeting in 2001.
55
Ministers noted with interest the proposal from Asia Pacific
Rim Universities (APRU) to cooperate with APEC. They agreed
to invite APRU to establish an informal dialogue with the
APEC Human Resource Development Working Group and the
Industrial Science and Technology Working Group, and to
invite the hosts of the respective sectoral Ministerial
meetings to consider an informal dialogue with APRU in
accordance with guidelines on non-member participation. The
objective of the dialogue would be to discuss issues and
projects of mutual interest in the areas of science,
technology and human resources development.
56 Ministers
welcomed Korea¡¦s offer to host the first Tourism
Ministerial Meeting in Seoul in July 2000. They noted with
interest work underway in the Tourism Working Group to
develop a draft APEC Tourism Charter which will provide a
business plan for economies to realise the extraordinary
potential of tourism in the APEC region.
57 Ministers
welcomed the proposal from Korea on Policy Dialogues on
Turning Economic Crisis into Opportunity for Sustained
Growth, and Korea¡¦s offer to host a forum in Seoul in early
2000 to share experiences on overcoming the crisis and to
address disparity issues. Ministers also welcomed the
proposal by Chinese Taipei on Economic Revitalisation
through Start-up Companies and Venture Capital, and looked
forward to further work in this area next year. They noted
with appreciation Indonesia¡¦s offer to host the next APEC
International Trade Fair in 2000. Ministers also took note
of the report on the APEC Symposium on the Asian economy,
organised by Japan and Thailand.
58 Ministers noted the
statements by the ASEAN Secretariat, the Pacific Economic
Cooperation Council, and the South Pacific Forum and the
report of the APEC Study Centres.
59 Ministers
endorsed:
„h the SOM Chair¡¦s Report on Budget Issues and
approved the 2000 budget of US$5,943,026 and contributions
from member economies amounting to US$3,338,000;
„h the
report of the APEC Secretariat, and expressed appreciation
for the work of the Executive Director and his staff.
60
Ministers thanked Brunei Darussalam for its briefing on
preparations for the 12th APEC Ministerial Meeting and the
Eighth APEC Economic Leaders¡¦ Meeting in Brunei Darussalam
on 12-13 November 2000 and 15-16 November 2000 respectively,
and China for its update on plans for the 13th Ministerial
Meeting to be held in China in 2001. The 14th Ministerial
Meeting in 2002 will be hosted by Mexico. Ministers welcomed
Thailand¡¦s offer to host the 15th Ministerial Meeting in
2003, and Chile¡¦s offer to host the 16th Ministerial
Meeting in 2004.
ANNEX A: APEC TRADE FACILITATION
ACHIEVEMENTS
„h Faster Customs Clearances
Faster
customs clearances through direct electronic communication
with Customs authorities without paperwork
„h More
Consistent Customs Valuations
Standard procedures for
more consistent and transparent customs valuations of traded
goods.
„h Expanded E-Commerce and Paperless Trading
Improved electronic access to markets for business and
commitment to a goal of paperless trading by 2005 for
developed and 2010 for developing economies, or as soon as
possible thereafter.
„h Simplified Business Travel
Simpler business travel with multiple entry visas,
internet visa information and visa-free short-term entry via
the APEC Business Travel Card.
„h Alignment of Standards
for Food, Electrical, Machinery and Rubber Products
Alignment of domestic standards with international
standards for goods such as radios, televisions, videos,
refrigerators, air-conditioners, rubber gloves and food
labelling, by 2005.
„h Lower Cost of Trade in Electrical
Equipment
Lower cost of trade in electrical goods such
as computers, toasters, televisions, radios and power-tools
through a single test for conformity assessments.
„h
Lower Cost of Trade in Telecommunications Equipment
Lower cost of trade in telecommunications goods such as
phones, faxes, modems, PABXs and radio transmitters, worth
an estimated $US 50 billion per year, through a single test
for conformity assessments.
„h Simplified Sales of
Telecommunications Services
Simplified negotiation of
telecommunications contracts and easier commercial access to
telecommunication networks.
„h Less Risk for Investment
in Energy Infrastructure
Better informed investment
decisions in energy infrastructure through the Manual of
Best Practice Principles for Independent Power Producers and
the Natural Gas Initiative.
„h Market Access Information
for Architects, Engineers and Accountants
Instant market
access information for architects, engineers and
accountants.
„h Less Waste in Fresh Seafood Trade
Less wastage and shorter transport times for fresh
seafood.
„h Better Y2K Preparedness
Transparent Y2K
preparedness, risk assessment and contingency
planning.
„h Market access information
Internet
access to information on tariffs, investment, e-commerce,
intellectual property, business travel, government
procurement, business opportunities, marine ports and labour
markets.
ANNEX B: PROJECTS AGREED UNDER THE EARLY
VOLUNTARY LIBERALISATION INITIATIVE IN 1999
„h Forest
products: a study on the full range non tariff measures and
their impact;
„h research on assessing forest resources
by remote sensing;
„h a study on methods to detect and
control forest damage caused by insects and diseases with
remote sensing, the General Information System and Global
Positioning System
„h internet-oriented multimedia
database of assessment and utilization of and trade in, the
wood of main tree species in APEC member economies
„h
Fisheries: a study on the consistency of global subsidy
practices with WTO rules;
„h Workshop on the Development
of APEC Mechanism for Integrated Coastal Management;
„h
Auto industry: an Automotive Dialogue involving business and
governments to map out strategies for increasing integration
and development of the auto sector;
„h Toy sector: a
seminar on implementation of ISO safety standards;
„h a
programme of training and development of designers and
sample makers;
„h Gems and Jewellery: implementation of
training programmes for Jewellery Testing, Assaying and
Hallmarking;
„h an APEC Gems and Jewellery Conference;
„h APEC Gems and Jewelry Trade and Technology Seminar
„h Environmental goods and services: a survey of these
markets in APEC;
„h study on the impact of the financial
crisis in Southeast Asia on trade liberalization in
environmental goods and services
„h Food: seminar on
reduction of antibiotic residues in the domestic animal
products
„h Medical Equipment: seminar for government
regulators/harmonization of regulation
„h establishment
of best practices in evaluation of product certification
applications and monitoring system;
„h Energy:
Seminar/Workshop on "Promoting Trade & Investments in the
Energy Sector among APEC Economies through EVSL"
„h
Telecommunications: Mutual Recognition Arrangement