Hon Phil Goff
Minister of Trade
Minister of Defence
9 June 2008
Speech Notes
Evolving Asia-Pacific Regionalism
Peterson Institute of International Economics
Washington D.C.
Thank you for the invitation to be here at the Peterson Institute today to speak on Evolving Asia-Pacific Regionalism.
It is a privilege to be hosted here by Dr Fred Bergsten.
As a former member of the APEC Eminent Persons Group and author of numerous studies on Asia-Pacific trade and economic
integration, Fred Bergsten’s work on this subject has helped shape the policy dialogue in APEC and more broadly.
The starting point of my comments, however, go a little wider than Asia-Pacific to the multilateral negotiations over
the Doha Development Agenda.
Members of the World Trade Organisation have an historic opportunity to conclude a deal that will liberalise the terms
of trade between 152 nations.
As a firm believer in a rules based multilateral trading system, New Zealand believes this Round has the greatest
potential to remove obstacles to international trade. The boost to trade, growth, jobs and living standards that will
result if the Round can be concluded this year would give a critical lift to the world economy at a time when the
financial crisis, inflation including food and oil prices, and a fall in property values threaten to cause recession.
A key outcome of the Round will be reduced domestic agricultural subsidies and the elimination of export subsidies,
which have long biased international trade in favour of developed agricultural producers at the expense of developing
countries.
As well as developing countries, New Zealand as an efficient agricultural producer with no agricultural subsidies, nor
any protection of our agricultural sector, would also benefit.
The crisis in food commodity shortages and spiralling costs provides another urgent reason to complete this Round.
For many of our countries the hike in food prices causes discomfort for household budgets. But for low income households
in developing countries where a high share of income is spent on food, the result is much more critical.
Estimates are that over 100 million more people could be cast into poverty and suffer malnutrition. Our achievement of
the Millennium Development Goals will be further away than ever. That in turn may result in social unrest and political
instability.
The causes of the price spike in agricultural commodities are complex, as is the range of policy options available to
respond to the situation. In part, the crisis in food supply and prices is demand driven. In particular, growth in
incomes in big developing countries has seen increasing demand for more and better quality food. Biofuels also
contribute to the problem. Some 25 per cent of US corn is now utilised to produce ethanol.
But structural supply factors are also in play. A key factor has been under-investment in agriculture and infrastructure
in developing countries. One of the key causes of that is unfair competition from heavily subsidised agricultural
products from rich countries and the inability of developing countries to export over high tariff barriers to the
wealthy countries.
With tight commodity markets forecast to continue over the next decade, the need to promote the efficient production of
and free up the flow of agricultural goods through reduction and elimination of subsidies and tariffs has never been
more important.
The liberalisation of trade through the WTO is New Zealand’s number one trade policy priority. The US is an important
partner in that process. New Zealand has worked closely with the USTR for a high quality outcome to the Round.
In addition to that, we continue to pursue other avenues for liberalising trade with our key trade partners, both
bilaterally and plurilaterally, within our region.
The Asia-Pacific region is a key driver of global economic growth: the APEC economies represent 55% of global GDP and
roughly 50% of international trade.
Asia-Pacific countries are actively pursuing preferential trade agreements, both with one another as well as with
partners outside the region. At last count, there were at least 40 such agreements either concluded or under negotiation
in the region.
The steady movement of East Asian economies toward establishing their own region-wide preferential trade agreement has
important implications.
Given the strategic and commercial importance of the region to New Zealand, it is vital that we are involved in the
major trade initiatives in the region, which otherwise could result not only in trade discrimination, but could
marginalise us in key regional groupings.
Trade discrimination across the Asia-Pacific region could also have flow-on security effects.
After global free trade through the WTO, New Zealand also has an interest in Asia-Pacific free trade in line with the
APEC vision. When President Clinton hosted APEC Leaders for the first time on Blake Island, Seattle in 1993, Leaders
produced a vision statement which declared that “we have the opportunity to build a new economic foundation for the
Asia-Pacific that harnesses the energy of our diverse economies, strengthens cooperation and promotes prosperity”.
The following year the APEC Bogor Goals committed developed APEC economies to “free and open trade and investment in the
Asia-Pacific by 2010.”
Those words will sound familiar to Fred Bergsten and I acknowledge the huge role that he played in these events as
Chairman of the APEC Eminent Persons Group forum.
The region is far more significant now in both economic and strategic terms than it was a decade ago when the Bogor
Goals were agreed. The case for realising the 1993 APEC vision of closer trade and economic integration has got even
stronger though it is not yet clear that the will of member states to achieve has grown commensurately.
APEC has begun work on the development of a Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific. The FTAAP concept offers a framework
for maintaining progress towards APEC’s trade and investment goals. New Zealand and the US share the goal of trade and
economic integration in the region, and are working closely together on the early stages of the FTAAP initiative.
However, given the challenges that many APEC economies will have to achieve the Bogor goals, the establishment of an
FTAAP has to be seen as a longer term goal. To too large extent the pace of its implementation, like the WTO, is set by
its most reluctant members.
The alternative is to create a bottom up process where like-minded countries agree to come together to liberalise trade
between them at a much faster rate.
New Zealand is in a grouping of this nature called the Trans-Pacific Strategic Economic Partnership Agreement, or “P4”.
P4 is a model free trade agreement.
It is the first trade agreement to involve several Pacific Rim countries – Singapore, Chile and Brunei, as well as New
Zealand.
It has a strong strategic dimension that serves to deepen the relationships between members spanning the Asia-Pacific
region. The P4 achieves a benchmark matched by few preferential trade agreements in having a commitment by all four
members to eliminate tariffs on all traded goods. At the same time the Agreement adopts a high-quality negative list
approach to trade in services and includes progressive provisions on Labour and Environment.
The shared vision of P4 members is to stimulate more open trade within the Asia-Pacific region in line with APEC goals.
One of the major strategic and economic advantages of the P4 Agreement is in its potential as a high quality building
block towards establishment of free trade in the Asia-Pacific region.
We welcome the interest that the US has shown in the P4 Agreement. US membership would provide critical mass necessary
to establish P4 as a corner-stone of regional integration efforts. Early membership of the Agreement provides an
unparalleled opportunity to influence the evolving regional trade and economic architecture.
Joining the P4 is an important way for the US to be fully engaged in the architecture of the Asia-Pacific region
particularly given groupings such as ASEAN plus 3 (China, Korea, Japan) and the East Asia Summit in which the US is not
a participant.
The East Asia Summit (EAS) is a high level forum for dialogue on broad strategic, political and economic issues of
common interest which aims to promote peace, stability and economic prosperity in East Asia.
It includes the ASEAN economies and China, Japan, Korea, India, Australia and New Zealand. Together these countries
represent a significant proportion of regional trade and economic activity.
In line with its efforts towards further integration and community building, the EAS has begun work on a Closer Economic
Partnership in East Asia, “CEPEA”. The EAS could become an important force for economic integration in the Asia-Pacific
region.
New regional powers such as China and India are industrialising, urbanizing and modernizing at an historically
unprecedented rate. New Zealand has made a major effort to ensure it is placed to take advantage of the opportunities
presented by these dynamic and large economies, both by seeking involvement in regional groups and through bilateral
agreements.
New Zealand recently became the first developed country in the world to sign a Free Trade Agreement with China. The
agreement will enter into force from 1 October this year. The FTA outcome meets our shared objective to achieve a
comprehensive, high quality FTA which is of mutual benefit to both countries.
The agreement opens the door for enhanced trade and investment between China and New Zealand. China will have duty free
access to the New Zealand market for all originating goods within nine years.
For New Zealand, the opportunity China afforded us to be first to conclude an agreement notwithstanding that we are only
its fiftieth largest trading partner avoids a scenario where we could have ended up some way down the list of its
negotiating partners.
That would have left our exporters disadvantaged in respect to those from countries who negotiated FTAs before us.
The FTA provides for full elimination by 2019 of tariffs on 96% of New Zealand’s current exports to China, with two
thirds of the tariffs gone within five years.
It also establishes a framework for resolving trade and investment, sanitary and phytosanitary, customs, IP and
technical barriers to trade issues that may arise. The Agreement is a significant step in our bilateral relationship and
a development which we hope will contribute to the objective of increasing integration in the Asia-Pacific region.
Other bilateral initiatives we are engaged with include preparations for free trade agreements with Korea, Japan and
India.
With Korea, the FTA study that was agreed to eighteen months ago is complete and very positive. We have agreed to
preparatory talks about negotiations in the second half of this year.
An FTA study is also under way with India.
With Japan, we recently agreed to begin an authoritative joint study to consider the potential for an Economic
Partnership Agreement (EPA) for both our countries.
These developments are significant in terms of the evolving regional dynamic and signify an important step in New
Zealand's relationship with these countries and in regional integration.
New Zealand’s trade and economic integration with Australia of course is almost seamless, underpinned by one of the most
comprehensive free trade agreements in the world – ANZCERTA. It is regarded by the WTO as the world’s best quality
bilateral FTA.
New Zealand and Australia are working together to conclude a plurilateral trade agreement with the ASEAN countries.
ANZFTA countries have a combined population of over 500 million people and a GDP of well over US$700 billion.
Economic integration also has an obvious influence on regional security and stability. Polarization of the region
between competing trade blocs on either side of the Pacific benefits no one. Our vision is of dynamic and open
regionalisation, governed by high quality agreements in which all players have a stake.
The vision of achieving progress and stability through cooperation and integration is not a new one. The Marshall plan
for European reconstruction following the Second World War had as its key objective, peace and prosperity.
The Breton Woods system too had at its core the goal of security and stability. One of the first political figures to
recognise the security link with trade and economic integration was President Franklin D Roosevelt. The Roosevelt
administration believed that the fundamental causes of the two World Wars lay in economic discrimination and trade
warfare.
The development of the European Union, beginning as a common market and moving to higher levels of integration, has as
one of its greatest achievements that war will never again occur between its member nations.
Trade pacts enhance the relationships between countries, creating avenues for dialogue and increasing prosperity,
reducing the opportunities for conflict. Similarly, achieving free trade in our region and the world requires a security
environment conducive to the free flow of goods, services and investment.
I would like finally and briefly to look at the question of Asia-Pacific Regional Security and Stability also from the
perspective of my other portfolio, Defence.
A feature of Asia’s contemporary security environment is the development of regional institutions which focus on
promoting defence and security dialogue and co-operation in the region.
Prominent among these is the ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF), which was established in July 1994. It brings together the
ASEAN countries and members of the wider Asia-Pacific region, including some of the larger players in the region such as
China, India, Russia, and the United States.
The ARF’s objectives are to foster dialogue and consultation on political and security issues, and to promote
confidence-building and preventive diplomacy in the Asia-Pacific region.
New Zealand welcomes the ARF’s role in bringing together all the major regional players into a security dialogue. The
inauguration of the East Asia Summit process, and the evolution of APEC’s role in dealing with security issues, sharpens
the focus on the ARF’s capacity to contribute to regional security.
New Zealand is involved in other key regional fora. One is the Shangri La Dialogue, which has taken place annually in
Singapore since 2002 and brings together defence ministers, chiefs of defence forces and senior defence officials from
27 countries, including the United States.
New Zealand is also part of the Five Power Defence Arrangements (or FPDA), which was established in 1971 and which
involves Singapore, Malaysia, the United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand, and includes a host of bilateral defence
and security arrangements.
Regional security architecture clearly is characterised by a set of overlapping arrangements. New Zealand welcomes the
increasing security dialogue and co-operation in the region.
We recognise the important contribution regional institutions make to confidence building and preventative diplomacy.
We are pleased with the increasing focus on the development of exercises and practical co-operation between regional
military forces in humanitarian and disaster relief operations.
And we welcome developments such as the interfaith dialogue process to give us a better understanding of each other and
remove misconceptions that can generate conflict.
Against the background of the emerging defence and security architecture in Asia, a fundamental point that will remain
is the important contribution the United States makes to security in the region. New Zealand views the role that the
United States plays in the Asia-Pacific region as vital to regional stability.
New Zealand for example supports the efforts the United States and others are making to combat the threats posed by the
perils of the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and terrorism.
New Zealand has been involved since its outset in the US-led Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI), a multilateral
initiative to prevent weapons of mass destruction, their delivery systems and related materials ending up in the wrong
hands. New Zealand is committed to the PSI and is currently preparing to host a PSI exercise in September 2008.
Over recent years, the United States and New Zealand have worked increasingly closely in areas where we share common
values and objectives. This includes Afghanistan, and in the South Pacific where there have been increasing problems of
poor governance, instability and failing states.
In conclusion, we live in a world in which both the scale and the pace of global change, economically and strategically,
are of unprecedented proportions.
It is also a world in which Asia has become the focus of economic and strategic change.
By 2020, Asia will account for around 45 per cent of global GDP, one third of global trade and one quarter of global
military spending.
The regional architecture in Asia therefore takes on increasing importance, as a means of tackling the critical
challenges which will arise and of maintaining regional security and stability.
New Zealand and the United States are of vastly different sizes. But its makes sense for countries which share so much
in common systems, institutions and values to work together as partners to ensure that the regional architecture is
inclusive and to pursue the objectives which we have in common.
Thank you.
ENDS