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SPEECHES
/ STATEMENTS
PM's statement at the 4th East
Asia Summit
October 25, 2009, New Delhi
I thank the Prime Minister of Thailand His Excellency
Mr. Abhisit Vejjajiva for convening the 4th East Asia
Summit and for the excellent arrangements made.
We meet against the backdrop of the global economic
and financial slowdown. The G-20 leaders have met thrice,
and the coordinated response to address this crisis
that has emerged from the G-20 has had some effect.
However, it is still too early to say whether we are
completely out of trouble. I support PM Rudds
suggestion for a meeting of EAS Finance Ministers to
examine sources of growth in the region.
The launching of the EAS process was an act of foresight.
It was also an act of faith in our collective potential.
Today the worlds eyes are on Asia as the region
which can lead the global economic revival from the
front. The Asian tigers captured the worlds attention
a few decades ago. Today, six of the twenty members
of the G-20 belong to the East Asia Summit.
We must learn lessons from the global economic crisis.
One of these is the need to ensure coordination in our
growth policies. The other is to keep the real economy
strong and sound. We agree with Japan that greater emphasis
has to be laid on growth of domestic demand. And the
third is to keep the flows of trade, technology and
investment open, orderly and predictable. The evolution
of the EAS process should conform to our first Declaration
issued in Kuala Lumpur which called for the EAS to be
an open, inclusive, transparent and outward looking
forum. We need to move forward in this direction, and
exhibit the requisite political will. Economic integration
among us could generate billions of dollars of additional
output.
The vision of Asian economic integration by coalescing
the Free Trade Agreements among member Asian countries
into an Asian Regional Trade Agreement is a pivotal
step towards the integration of Asia into a common unit.
This can lead to the creation of a broader Asian Economic
Community.
Our focus should be on generation of stronger domestic
demand in Asian economies through investment in infrastructure,
creation and strengthening of the social welfare net,
skill development of our workforce and environmentally
sustainable and inclusive growth.
India welcomes the recommendations of the Phase II
Report on a Comprehensive Economic Partnership in East
Asia with regard to the three pillars of economic cooperation,
facilitation and liberalisation. An early realisation
of its roadmap for economic and financial integration,
we believe, would be the right step forward for our
grouping.
India is playing its part in this process. We have
signed Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreements
with Singapore and the Republic of Korea and recently
a Trade in Good Agreements with the ASEAN. We are in
discussions with Japan, China, Thailand and Malaysia
and other countries to conclude agreements of a similar
nature.
The proposals generated by the Economic Research Institute
of ASEAN and East Asia [ERIA] to develop a blueprint
for financial and economic integration of the EAS region,
especially in the area of infrastructure development
and connectivity, are promising, and deserve our encouragement.
India would be happy to contribute 1 million US dollars
over a period of ten years for enlarging the activities
of ERIA.
We are greatly encouraged that the Summit will adopt
a Statement on the establishment of the Nalanda University
in the State of Bihar in India. This has been the product
of many months of hard work put in by the Nalanda Mentor
Group, and will be a shining example of cooperative
action in the field of education. I thank our Singapore
colleague for his pioneering zeal in pursuit of this
idea.
Climate change is a major challenge facing the world,
but it is particularly so for the developing and fast
growing economies in Asia. The EAS process should come
up with a workable model of sustainable development.
Financing and technology transfers are its key elements.
The challenge before us is to find a global mechanism
which, while safeguarding the incentives for innovation
and development of environment friendly technologies
in the private sector, also simultaneously ensures the
availability of such technology to developing countries
at an affordable cost.
Many of our countries face the spectre of terrorism.
There are growing threats from non-traditional sources,
such as piracy, transnational groups and extremist ideologies.
I agree with the President of Indonesia. This will increasingly
require a concerted and cooperative response in the
coming period. We will have to play greater attention
to issues of social exclusion, and regional imbalances
in development. The fight against pandemics and collaboration
in disaster management are other areas which will need
our attention.
The East Asia Summit holds great potential. If we pool
our collective wisdom and resources, there is little
doubt that the EAS will emerge as an oasis of peace,
stability and prosperity in a fast changing world.
Thank you.
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