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Sunday, June 12, 2011

Asia & the Pacific Led the Economy in the World but threaten by high food and fuel prices

According to the ESCAP study Dr. Noeleen Heyzer is under-secretary-general of the United Nations and executive secretary of ESCAP, and Dr. Nagesh Kumar is chief economist of the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, Bangkok.

China, India, the Philippines, Thailand & Singapore one of the leading countries boosting economic growth in Asia and the Pacific, more than any other region in the world, will experience greater transformation and change in the coming years, as the region’s economic strength plays a greater role in the global economy and as its population centers struggle to overcome the burdens of poverty, hunger, natural disasters and social inequalities.

The region’s economic growth figures,

Recently released in the “U.N. ESCAP Economic and Social Survey of Asia and the Pacific 2011,” indicate just how powerful Asia’s economy is for the world already.

The Asia-Pacific region recovered strongly in 2010 from the global financial crisis and recession of 2008-09 with the region’s developing economies growing at 8.8 percent.

In 2011, growth in developing economies of the region is forecast to be 7.3 percent ― lower than 2010’s high growth which represented a recovery from the low base of the 2009 recession.

Asia-Pacific remains by far the most dynamic growth region in the world, according to the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP), and the locomotive of global growth. Its growth rate this year will be nearly one and a half times more than any other region.

While the region is led by the powerhouse developing economies of China and India, growing at 9.5 percent and 8.7 percent respectively, Philippine 7.3 percent,  growth in 2011 is broad based at more than 5 percent across Asia-Pacific’s subregions.

Despite these promising economic growth figures, Asia-Pacific still remains vulnerable to the risks posed by volatile short-term capital flows and the resurgence of food and fuel price inflation, and, as the tragic March 11 earthquake in Japan underscores, natural disasters.

High food prices have direct impact on the region’s poor. ESCAP estimates show that as many as 42 million additional people in the region are impoverished by 2011’s high food and energy prices.

High oil prices could significantly reduce economic growth ― lowering predictions by up to one percentage point for some Asia-Pacific economies in 2011, especially vulnerable economies are Singapore, Thailand, Philippines and India.

For the poorest and most populated countries, high food and fuel prices will slow the effects of high economic growth helping families out of poverty. Achieving the Millennium Development Goals for poverty alleviation by 2015 could be delayed by five years in many countries, especially in Bangladesh, India, Laos and Nepal.

Countries can take immediate policy steps to moderate the impacts of rising food and fuel prices on our region’s poorest people:

At the national level, lowering tariffs and taxes will reduce prices and social protection measures should be undertaken in the form of food vouchers, income transfers and school feeding programs to reduce the burden on the poor. Government buffer stocks of commodities should be utilized when market supplies are low.

Over the longer term, all countries must focus on enhancing support for agricultural R&D and rural credit for fostering a new, knowledge-intensive green revolution. Such strategies will not only boost food supplies, but will also assist the poorest communities, where sustainable agricultural development remains a reliable anti-poverty strategy.

Global initiatives, regional and subregional groupings should back up national strategies. The G20, the world’s major economic policy forum, could act to discipline speculative activity in food and fuel commodities and conversion of cereals into biofuels.

For oil price volatility, the G20, being the group of all major consumers, including eight members from Asia and the Pacific, may engage OPEC ― the group of major oil producers ― to demarcate a benchmark “fair” price of oil and seek an agreement to restrict oil price movements within a band around it, besides creating a global strategic oil reserve to moderate the volatility of oil prices.

Another challenge for Asia-Pacific economies is to generate more aggregate demand in the region to mitigate some loss of demand from developed economies as they restrain their debt-fuelled consumption. Inclusive development policies like poverty reduction and social protection can enhance domestic demand.

Furthermore, the emergence of Asia-Pacific region as the growth pole of the world economy means the importance of regional economic integration cannot be overemphasized.

The time has come to take a broader approach which focuses not just on deepening integration within subregions but also on fostering trade and business links to build a seamless Asia-Pacific economic space.

Working together, the Asia Pacific region can shape the forces of the present economic recovery by investing in its people, and by implementing social protections as a mainstay of national development. Asia Pacific is a leader in the global economy, and it now has the opportunity to safeguard the development gains of its people.

 

Philippines & United States set joint naval exercise June 28, 2011

The Philippines and the United States are set to embark on a joint naval exercise late this month, but officials said the tensions in the West Philippine Sea have nothing to do with the programmed war drill.

The military confirmed the holding of the joint naval exercises as China warned the US should not get involved in the territorial dispute in the South China Sea (Referring the 3 Seas of West Philippines Sea, Vietnam’ East and South China Sea)  since “the US is not a party to the dispute.”

For the Philippines, since the other claimants are invading the Philippines waters and overlapping their claims instead of just staying in the Middle of the 3 SEAS china reached up their claim to the Palawan shore, Vietnam want to owned including the province of the Philippines in Kalayaan which is within 200 Nautical Mile Exclusive Economic Zone of the Philippines as guaranteed by the UNCLOS and Malaysia is overlapping to the Philippine Waters. Since the Philippines is against any war; it is the rights of the Philippines to embrace America to mediate and to lessen the tension.

“The joint naval exercise will start on June 28 at the Naval Forces West (Navforwest),” Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) spokesman Commodore Jose Miguel Rodriguez said.

“It has been programmed since last year,” Rodriguez added. There has been no announcement yet of the specific location of the military exercises but Navforwest operates mainly in the Sulu Sea and nearby waters.

The planned naval exercise, called “Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training” or CARAT, is in accordance with the Mutual Defense Treaty between the Philippines and the United States.

This year’s CARAT exercise is aimed at testing the capability of the two navies to undertake “freedom of navigation operations.”

Philippine military officials announced the coming naval maneuvers amid heightened tensions in the West Philippine Sea and the South China Sea stoked by alleged intrusions by Chinese vessels into Philippine waters and into disputed territories, particularly the Spratly Islands Group.

Vietnam earlier announced plans for a nine-hour live fire naval exercise tentatively set June 13, 2011 off central Quang Nam province near the Paracel, apparently in response to increased Chinese activities near the Paracel and Spratlys.

The US Navy’s guided-missile destroyer USS Chung-Hoon is underway to participate in the CARAT.

Considered as one of the most powerful warships in the US Navy, the Arleigh Burke class destroyer left its home port at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii late last week and may now be in international waters near the Sulu Sea.

AFP chief Gen. Eduardo Oban Jr. said the arrival of Chung-Hoon has nothing to do with the territorial spat with China.

Navy spokesman Lt. Col. Omar Tonsay said the US Navy vessel has yet to make contact and that it might have to complete a separate mission before sailing to the Philippines.

“There’s no need for them (Chung-Hoon officers) to coordinate with us their activities while they are still in international waters. They will inform us anyway once they reach port. Maybe they have other activities before CARAT,” Tonsay said.

He said the details of the coming joint naval war drill are still being worked out. “We are having a planning conference next week,” he said.

Philippines could Count United States to Defend the Sovereignty

Malacañang Palace , Manila; meanwhile, expressed confidence that the country can count on the United States support in defending its sovereignty but emphasized the preeminence of diplomacy in settling territorial disputes.

“We are committed to the resolution of the issue in the most diplomatic and the most peaceful way possible. I haven’t seen the terms of the Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT) quite recently but I know that as an ally the United States will help should it reach that point because of the Mutual Defense Treaty,” deputy presidential spokesperson Abigail Valte said over radio dzRB.

She said the AFP leadership would likely take up the territorial issue in the upcoming Philippines-US Mutual Defense Board meeting in Hawaii in August, but she is not aware if President Aquino has specific instructions to Oban.

“As a security issue, that will depend entirely on Gen. Oban. But since it is a security issue, it is normal to talk about the issue in that kind of meeting, but I imagine one way or the other, it will be discussed,” Valte said.

 

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