APEC Ministers Responsible for Trade Meeting Joint Statement
Ministers Responsible for Trade Meeting Joint
Statement 2019
1. We, the Asia Pacific Economic
Cooperation (APEC) Ministers Responsible for Trade, met in
Viña del Mar, Chile from 17-18 May 2019 to discuss key
regional and global trade issues, and to advance our work
for sustainable and inclusive economic growth and prosperity
in the Asia-Pacific.
2. We appreciate the participation
of the Director-General of the World Trade Organization
(WTO), the Chair of the APEC Business Advisory Council
(ABAC), the Pacific Economic Cooperation Council (PECC), the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and the
Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat (PIFS).
3. This year we
celebrate the twenty-fifth anniversary of the first meeting
of Ministers Responsible for Trade. That first meeting arose
from members’ collective desire to enhance economic
cooperation, leading to our agreement on the Bogor Goals for
free and open trade and investment in the Asia-Pacific
region, which continue to guide our work. Since then, we
have focused on giving momentum to trade and investment
liberalization.
4. In 2019, as we celebrate APEC’s
thirtieth anniversary, we take pride in what our economies
have achieved together through non-binding, voluntary,
collaborative and consensus-based cooperation. We reaffirm
these principles, which continue to underpin our work, with
a view to achieving a peaceful, dynamic and prosperous
Asia–Pacific region, for the benefit of all. We welcome
the APEC 2019 theme “Connecting People; Building the
Future”.
Priorities for
2019
5. During our meeting, we discussed the
following priorities identified by Chile for APEC in 2019,
acknowledging the progress underway in each of these areas,
and tasking officials to work towards robust outcomes, to
ensure strong deliverables by Leaders’ Week in
November.
Women, SMEs and Inclusive
Growth
6. Increasing participation in the economy by
all is critical for economic growth and is at the core of
APEC’s work. We are committed to further advance economic,
financial and social inclusion, including efforts to foster
rural development and raise living standards. Our efforts
will contribute to narrowing the gap in economic
development, consistent with the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable
Development.
7. In 2019, women continue to face multiple
barriers, such as discriminatory laws and norms, and
insufficient access to formal labor markets, education,
skills development, financing and digital technologies. This
results in income gaps, constraints on mobility, and limited
access to economic opportunities. Building on the important
work that has been achieved in APEC to date, we welcome the
development of a roadmap for women and inclusive growth,
which will catalyze efforts across APEC, to increase
women’s economic development and empowerment in all areas.
We encourage officials to ensure that the roadmap is
comprehensive and action-oriented, with ambitious and
focused targets.
8. We strongly support the ongoing work
across APEC towards the internationalization of Micro, Small
and Medium Size Enterprises (MSMEs) and startups. This work
should continue to focus on reducing barriers and trade
costs through capacity building, supporting innovation, and
improving access to new markets, information, digital tools
and financing. We commit to redouble our efforts to ensure
competitive services markets, given their importance for
MSMEs.
Digital Society
9. New technologies can
be engines of innovation and prosperity. It is critical that
the APEC region embraces the opportunities and address the
challenges of the digital economy. We need to work together
to create an enabling and non-discriminatory environment
that fosters innovation and allows businesses and
entrepreneurs to thrive. To do so we encourage economies to
identify and reduce unnecessary regulatory barriers, bridge
gaps and improve access to the digital economy, including
through capacity building. We note the importance of
facilitating the free flow of information and data, while
recognizing applicable domestic laws and regulations. We
welcome our business community’s call for APEC to take
urgent action to fully harness the potential of the digital
economy.
10. We call on officials to start working on a
comprehensive work program for the implementation of all
elements of the APEC Internet and Digital Economy Roadmap
and look forward to the APEC Economic Policy Report 2019
“Structural Reform and Digital Economy”, so that APEC
can report on progress to Leaders by the end of the
year.
Integration 4.0
11. The rapidly changing
business climate, driven by the development and application
of new technologies, has led to a fourth industrial
revolution. In this context, we reaffirm the importance of
predictable and transparent, non-discriminatory frameworks
for trade and investment. We support the focus this year on
trade facilitation, global value chains, as well as smart
trade, borders and logistics. We encourage further efforts,
especially to ensure that MSMEs benefit from these
initiatives.
12. We encourage work under the APEC
Connectivity Blueprint in order to enhance physical,
institutional and people-to-people connectivity in the APEC
region. We stress the importance of improving connectivity
through quality infrastructure development based upon
relevant APEC work. We recognize the work to advance
subregional, rural and remote areas connectivity.
13. It
is important that we improve our understanding of global
value chains, including through capacity building
activities, allowing us to better design and implement
policies that support an enabling environment for trade and
investment, especially for MSMEs.
Sustainable
Growth
14. We recognize that the viability of global
trade depends on the protection of ecosystems and the
sustainable development of natural resources supporting our
economies and societies, and we are committed to
strengthening our cooperation in this regard.
15. The
Pacific Ocean unites us, and we note the increasingly
adverse impact of marine debris, the unsustainable use of
fisheries and aquaculture resources, and Illegal, Unreported
and Unregulated (IUU) Fishing on fish stocks, the marine
environment, food security, and livelihoods. We encourage
additional work to address these challenges and look forward
to further discussion on these critical issues during
Leader’s week in November. We reiterate our support for
the work underway in the WTO for comprehensive and effective
disciplines that prohibit certain forms of fisheries
subsidies, as agreed during MC11.
Deepening
APEC’s Regional Economic Integration
Agenda
16. We are committed to attaining the
Bogor Goals of achieving free and open trade and investment
in the Asia-Pacific through collective and individual
efforts. We welcome the progress that has been made and
recognize that more work remains to be done. Accordingly,
our Leaders have repeatedly urged us to take concrete
actions in support of addressing unfinished business by the
deadline of 2020.
17. We encourage initiatives that
support a final push towards the Bogor Goals and urge
officials to identify additional areas of work. In this
regard, we welcome the special focus on services proposed
this year and we reiterate our commitment to additional
actions to increase our economies’ competitiveness in the
services sector by 2025.
18. We strongly urge economies
to reduce tariffs under APEC’s list of Environmental Goods
as soon as possible. APEC economies that currently
participate in the Information Technology Agreement
expansion agree to work together to achieve broader
participation.
19. We noted the important task ahead of
defining an ambitious post-2020 vision, building on APEC's
cornerstone of free and open trade and investment. We take
note and appreciate the work of the APEC Vision Group and
look forward to the completion of its report in November
2019 as a significant contribution to this
process.
20. In 2004 in Chile, ABAC proposed a study on
the feasibility of a Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific
(FTAAP). Since then, the concept of FTAAP as a long-term
contribution to APEC’s regional integration agenda has
been progressing through work programs within APEC and trade
agreements among APEC economies. In this connection, we urge
members to work constructively to pursue further work,
including in all areas identified by economies, to advance
the Lima Declaration. Recognizing APEC’s role as an
incubator of ideas, we highlight the importance of capacity
building initiatives and information sharing mechanisms,
which will also enhance APEC economies’ ability to
participate in high quality, comprehensive free trade
agreements in the future.
Advancing APEC’s
support for the WTO
21. During our meeting, we
noted a report from the WTO Director-General Mr. Roberto
Azevêdo on current developments in international trade and
the WTO.
22. International trade is important for
productivity, innovation, job creation, and development.
APEC Economies recognize the contributions that the WTO has
made to this end. We affirm the importance of transparent
and non-discriminatory, agreed upon rules in the WTO, which
can enhance market predictability, enable business
confidence, and allow trade to flow. Recognizing the WTO’s
role in this regard, we agree that action is necessary to
improve its functioning.
23. We task our officials to
accelerate practical and concrete areas of work that can
advance APEC’s support for the WTO’s work, including in
areas such as capacity building initiatives for transparency
and notifications, and the implementation of the Trade
Facilitation Agreement. In this regard we acknowledge
APEC’s work on domestic regulation of services, investment
facilitation and MSMEs. We acknowledge progress on
negotiations in Geneva on electronic commerce and we
encourage initiatives in APEC that can contribute to this
work.
24. We recognize our business community’s call
for APEC to continue supporting the multilateral trading
system. We encourage continued constructive engagement on
WTO issues, including in the lead-up to the twelfth WTO
Ministerial Conference in Nur-Sultan.
Final
points
25. Taking note of the recent terrorist
attacks, including the use of the internet for terrorist
purposes, we recognize the need to take into account broader
efforts by government, the private sector and other
segments of society, to address terrorist content
online.
26. We reaffirmed the importance of strengthening
and revitalizing APEC’s engagement with the private
sector, including with ABAC. We encourage ABAC to engage
with relevant stakeholders, including MSMEs, to ensure it
can continue to represent the broader business
community.
27. We took the opportunity to welcome the new
Executive Director of the APEC Secretariat, Tan Sri Dr.
Rebecca Fatima Sta Maria and we wish her success in her
role.
28. We acknowledge the Chair H.E. Roberto Ampuero
E., Minister of Foreign Affairs of Chile, and we thank the
cities of Viña del Mar and Valparaíso for their
hospitality.