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ABAC Proposals On Global Credit
Contraction
By Azlan Othman and Sonia K
Bandar Seri
Begawan - With the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC)
2008 in Peru drawing closer in November, the APEC Business Advisory
Council (ABAC) yesterday presented their report to the leaders at
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade.
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On hand to
receive the report on behalf of His Majesty the Sultan and
Yang Di-Pertuan of Brunei Darussalam's Government was the
Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade II, Pehin Orang Kaya
Pekerma Dewa Dato Seri Setia Lim Jock Seng.
Presenting the report were
Salleh Bostaman Zainal Abidin, Fauziah Dato Talip and
Stephen Ong who were representing the Chairman of the APEC
Business Advisory Council (ABAC), a group comprising some of
the most successful and widely recognized names in private
business in the Asia Pacific region.
This year's ABAC report
addresses issues such as global credit contraction,
Acceleration of Regional |
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Economic Integration (RED,
Small and Medium Enterprises (SME) and Micro-Enterprise
Development, response to food supply and prices and
mitigation climate change.
ABAC revealed these
specific set of recommendations to address the issues:
The global credit
contraction, sparked by the sub-prime mortgage crisis
and write down by various international banks:
Regulation should be activity-based and achieved through
informal collaboration among regulatory bodies, within
and across APEC Economies;
Acceleration of
Regional Economic Integration (RED: APEC Ministers
should accelerate work on the Free Trade Area for the
Asia Pacific by completing REI studies and exploring all
options to achieve the free flow of goods, services,
labour and capital within the region; |
Small and Medium (SME) and
Micro-Enterprise Development: Governments should establish various
forms of social and financial support in the development and
Information Communication Technology (ICT); introduce intellectual
property protection programs and encourage the use of evolving new
technologies;
Response to food supply and prices:
APEC should renounce the use of embargoes and other export
restrictions as a means of addressing perceived food shortages;
Mitigation of climate change: In
order to more aggressively pursue energy efficiency to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions, each APEC economy should formulate
specific goals and action plans. A peer review mechanism should be
established to monitor progress. Because APEC goals are economic in
nature, input from ABAC is a critical consideration of APEC
policy-makers.
These and other recommendations
will be formally issued to APEC Economic Leaders summit to be held
in Lima, Peru. --
Courtesy of Borneo Bulletin
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