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Address by:
The Hon Peter Costello
Treasurer of the Commonwealth of Australia
"AUSTRALIA'S ROLE IN ASIA"
THE AUSTRALASIA CENTRE OF THE ASIA SOCIETY ANNUAL DINNER
WEDNESDAY, 16 OCTOBER 2002
I flew up here this evening from the Parliamentary
sitting in Canberra, and as I was walking through the terminal at
Sydney Airport, a man came up to me and said: "My name's David.
I've got a son who is missing in Bali." And I said to him:
"What news have you had?" And he said: "Only that
he hasn't been back to his motel." He was standing there, with
a friend who had his arm around him, and I said: "Who is this?"
He said: "It is the Godfather. We're flying to Bali tonight
to bring our boy home. "The events of last weekend in Bali
have reminded us again all too clearly, and all too painfully, how
Asia and Australia are inextricably linked. Asia's security problems
are our security problems. Asia's future will influence our future.
And Australia has a vital interest in the way the countries of the
region deal with the immense challenges before them.
Leave aside the geographic question about where Asia
starts and finishes. The point here is that Australians are part
of Asia. They are found working, travelling, and living throughout
the Asian region. In all of the economic centres there are Australian
citizens using their skills and adding investment to the countries
of the region. And these are many of our best and brightest. These
Australians, thoroughly engaged in the local communities, are on
a person to person, business to business basis drawing our countries
together with overlapping ties and ongoing interests.
Security problems in Asia are security problems for
Australians and for Australia. This evil attack, this senseless
carnage has wasted young and precious Australian lives. And Singaporean,
Japanese, Korean and, of course, Indonesian lives, as well as citizens
from many other countries.
Perhaps these twisted perpetrators thought they were
punishing Westerners like Australians. Or perhaps they thought they
were punishing Balinese business interests. Perhaps they think that
killing people will somehow lead to a change in the Indonesian Government.
At this stage it is too early to say how the criminal mind was thinking.
But the withdrawal of tourism, and the withdrawal
of investment as a result, will harm Indonesia. It will damage the
Indonesian economy. It will cause additional hardship to the Indonesian
people.
What we must be careful about is that it does not
lead to a withdrawal of Australian engagement with Indonesia. We
must not withdraw. We must increase our engagement. In the first
place we must increase our engagement on law enforcement.
We should work from our strengths as an advanced country
in the region to stand shoulder to shoulder with our neighbours
in the fight against terrorism.
Already we have sent experienced investigators and
forensic experts to assist with the immediate aftermath of the attack.
Australia now has close to 50 personnel on the ground
in Bali, comprising police and intelligence officers, experts in
victim identification, crime scene examiners, fingerprint and bomb
examiners and search and rescue personnel.
We will explore all options with Indonesian authorities
for the pursuit and prosecution of suspects.
The perpetrators must be brought to justice. And we
must heighten our engagement in the security sense. We have a common
interest in improving the capacity to intercept warnings of terrorist
activity. We have a common interest in working against terrorist
cells in disrupting their organisation and freezing their finances.
The terrorists should be under no illusion that they can gain from
their actions. And Australia will not be deterred from deeper regional
engagement and cooperation. Indeed, the events in Bali will only
serve as a spur for strengthened cooperation on all fronts.
THE STRATEGIC IMPORTANCE OF ASIA
Asia is economically and strategically important in
world terms. Asia contains the world's second largest economy, Japan,
and the world's two largest emerging markets, China and India. Notwithstanding
the difficulties Japan has faced over recent years, on a purchasing
power parity basis it continues to account for almost 7 per cent
of world GDP. Asia as a whole accounts for a third of world output;
East Asia accounts for the bulk (85 per cent) of this. Fifty-five
per cent of the world's population lives in Asia (60 per cent of
whom are in East Asia).
Of course East Asia is our main regional trading partner.
Around 58 per cent of our exports of goods and services
go to East Asia (including NZ and PNG). The Menzies Government negotiated
the Commerce Agreement in 1957 which opened the
Australia - Japan trading relationship. Japan is our
largest export market by far and seven of our ten largest merchandise
export markets are in East Asia. By the same token, our major source
of imports is the East Asian group of economies (47 per cent of
our imports).
East Asia is also an important investment market,
accounting for 21 per cent of our inward accumulated investment
and 15 per cent of our outward accumulated investment. Australia's
investment relationship with the United States and Europe is much
larger. But further economic growth, stability and development in
Asia will, I think, stimulate broader Australian investment in the
region, and greater Asian investment in Australia.
These figures highlight the importance of Asia to
Australia. Our regional partners also recognise that Australia brings
substantial commercial value to Asia. China's recent decision to
award a 25 year LNG contract worth $20 to $25 billion to Australia
is a powerful demonstration of this.
Our many interactions with the region have also changed
who we are. More than 1.3 million Australians claim Asian ancestry.
According to the 2001 Census, more Australians now describe themselves
as of Asian background than of Greek, Italian and Maltese background
combined.
Australia has its own unique culture. We are a people
who confidently enjoy the cultures of Asia and the rest of the world.
Seven of our top 10 overseas travel destinations are in the region.
When I first became Treasurer in 1996, East Asia,
which had seen decades of stellar economic performance, was considered
the blueprint for emerging market economies. Countries in the region
with high savings rates, a strong work ethic, rapid industrialisation,
and strong Government economic intervention had rapidly lifted growth
rates and improved living standards. The Asian `economic miracle'
was in full swing. Some commentators pointed to it as a model for
the advanced economies of the developed world.
By comparison with other emerging markets, in Europe,
Africa, Latin America, and the new republics of Central Asia, East
Asia countries are still the stellar performers. But the `economic
miracle' was savagely interupted in 1997. The financial crisis first
in Thailand, then in Indonesia and Korea, engulfed the whole region.
The exchange rate instability and the flight of capital
eventually led to significant recession. Only China and Australia
withstood the crisis. And it focussed attention on structural weaknesses
in many economies of the region. In Indonesia the financial and
economic crisis contributed to the end of President Suharto's government.
But our response in 1997 was to increase our engagement with the
region. We stood shoulder to shoulder with countries affected. We
knew that the financial instability in Asia represented a very direct
threat to our economic prospects. We want a strong and prosperous
Asia. For Asia's sake and for our own.
In the midst of the 1997-98 crisis, Australia committed
to financial assistance in the form of $US 1 billion loans for each
of Thailand, Indonesia and Korea. Japan was the only other country
to commit itself to assistance for all three of these countries.
This commitment of bilateral finance was made in support of financial
stabilisation packages led by the IMF, the World Bank and the Asian
Development Bank.
Australia was a founding member of the Asian Development
Bank in 1966 and continues to play an active role as the region's
second largest shareholder.
We have worked hard in forums such as the Executives' Meeting of
East Asia Pacific (EMEAP) Central Banks to foster an effective regional
policy dialogue and financial cooperation in support of stability.
In the mid-1990s, the Reserve Bank of Australia entered into repurchase
agreements with many of its central bank counterparts in the region.
In 1997, as part of a collaborative response to the
financial crisis facing the region, Australia worked with others
to establish the Manila Framework Group to facilitate bilateral
financing between countries in the region. We continue to play an
active role in this forum.
We have also been a strong voice in support of Asian
interests and representation in the various multilateral forums
in which we participate. Australia was a key player in the formation
of the Bretton Woods Institutions: the IMF and World Bank. We have
constantly strived to make these institutions work as effectively
as possible and to represent the interests of our region. We were
strong and independent advocates for better assistance and revision
of inappropriate IMF programs during the financial crisis of 1997.
We continue to argue for more appropriate representation of Asia
in the IMF and World Bank.
We have also been active in the Financial Stability
Forum in pressing for improved accountability and openness of both
governments and private financial entities, like hedge funds - a
matter of concern to many of our regional partners. In the WTO,
together with our partners, we have pursued a more open and fairer
international trade and investment system. And we strongly supported
an outstanding Thai candidate to lead the WTO.
Australia has also steadfastly supported the G-20,
a grouping that brings together the G-8 with Australia and the world's
other systemically important economies. As a group which includes
both the key industrialised economies and major emerging markets
such as China, Brazil, India and Indonesia, the G-20 provides an
unparalleled opportunity for the region's systemically important
economies to have an effective voice in the global policy debate.
Australia's commitment to the region has been tried,
tested, and proven.
THE FUTURE OF ASIAN ECONOMIC INTEGRATION
The significant increase in interest over the past
five years in exploring regional responses, in particular in East
Asia, to shared economic and financial challenges is clearly a development
of great significance.
East Asia is seeking to deal constructively and cooperatively
with changes in the strategic position and power of key countries
in the region. And, after the turmoil of the past five years it
is looking closely at regional cooperation and promoting greater
integration.
In the 1980s, Australia worked with Japan to establish
APEC, and has continued to provide leadership in that grouping.
My own experience with the APEC Finance Ministers process highlights
the useful exchanges between Ministers on fiscal and financial sector
reform. Over the last seven APEC Finance Ministers meetings I have
valued the unique opportunity to meet with colleagues from around
the region. APEC has proven of great value in areas such as capacity
building and the strengthening of financial systems and improving
corporate governance frameworks.
One of the great lessons of the 1997-98 financial
crisis is the importance of an economic framework supported by strong
institutions. This framework must include financial supervision,
prudential standards, judicial independence, focussed corporate
regulation and arms length lending, all of which are important for
a well functioning economy and the ability to withstand external
shocks. Developing institutions capable of performing these roles
in all the countries of the region is crucial to regional stability.
Some officials and commentators in the region have
argued that regional economic cooperation should aim for an exchange
rate mechanism and, ultimately, a common currency along the line
of the European Monetary Union. This is an ambitious objective.
Our region encompasses some of the world's largest economies and
some of its smallest. It includes countries at widely different
stages of economic development, from very rich developed economies
to rapidly growing emerging industrial economies to poor, subsistence-based
economies. It embraces dramatically different cultural, legal and
commercial traditions. Virtually all of the world's great religions
are to be found here. We are a region of unparalleled diversity.
This dramatic diversity suggests our ambitions for
greater economic integration need to be realistic.
We believe those ambitions should start with trade.
Here NAFTA could provide a more realistic model for Asia than the
European Union. And the region has already set itself the goal of
free trade in the Bogor declaration. Delivering the Bogor commitment
would be an enormous advance toward closer integration.
The creation of new regional forums, such as ASEAN+3,
is bringing leaders, ministers, and officials together to discuss
issues and policy in a constructive and open manner. It enables
collaboration in identifying and managing shared risks. And, more
generally, it gives countries in the region the ability to more
effectively project East Asian interests, and provide an East Asian
perspective, in global institutions and policy forums.
The Chiang Mai Initiative, complemented by further
evolution of the Manila Framework Group, may provide the basis for
another important area of regional cooperation - enhanced financial
cooperation. It is possible that such developments will eventually
also result in new mechanisms for crisis funding complementary to
existing global mechanisms and institutions.
Some appear concerned that these developments signal
the rise of insularity in East Asia. This interpretation fails to
recognise that East Asia's economic and strategic interests are
fundamentally global. The region depends heavily on markets in,
and investment from, Europe and the Americas. For this reason, I
think that East Asia is highly unlikely to turn in on itself.
But this is not a foregone conclusion. The more other
regions turn inward and engage less with the world, the harder it
is for Asia to remain oriented outward. It is therefore very much
in Australia's interests to use what influence we have at both the
global and regional level to strengthen the multilateral trading
and investment system and resist protectionism and insularity in
all its forms. Let me also say that countries outside the region
need to remain engaged, and to engage constructively.
While the economies of Asia are at different stages
of development, their performance has so far been largely driven
by their integration into global production chains focused on meeting
external demand. It may be some time before the economies of the
region, collectively, can begin to look to domestic drivers of growth.
However, the presence of giants such as China and India underscores
the potential for this, if structural reforms aimed at improving
the allocation of abundant domestic savings, enhancing productivity,
and increasing the ability of local populations to participate in
the benefits of growth are sustained.
The resilience of our own economy in the face of the
severe decline in many of our trading partners during the 1997-98
crisis is powerful testament to the importance of structural reform
and a sound policy framework.
Structural reform - ranging from a floating exchange
rate and lower tariffs, to implementing an effective competition
and corporate regulatory system, introducing a new tax system, and
freeing up the labour market - positioned our economy to be able
to respond flexibly to rapidly changing circumstances. A sound medium-term
macroeconomic framework, and the repayment of Commonwealth debt
preserved our credibility with investors and consumers and reduces
the risks of policy mistakes.
This has made Australia more relevant than ever before
as a partner in commerce and economic development to the rest of
the region.
CONCLUSION
Our links to date with Asia have been deep and complex
in economic terms. I have no doubt these will continue to deepen
to our mutual benefit. Given our geography and the intensity of
our economic relationships with East Asia, we see ourselves as an
integral member of the East Asia region, and we stand ready to participate
further in regional dialogue and mechanisms for financial stability
and cooperation.
The events of the past few days in Bali have brought
home the reality that when it comes to terrorism, national borders
are irrelevant. Asia's security problem is Australia's and vice
versa. At one time terrorism was local. It is no longer. Terrorism
is international and the response to it must be international.
The economic impacts of terrorist attacks are very
widespread and fall most heavily on the vulnerable members of society.
To counter this threat, cooperative and forceful action
is required. For our part, we have taken active steps, particularly
since September 11, to bolster regional cooperation to combat the
threat of terrorism.
Indonesia and Australia signed a Memorandum of Understanding
in February of this year to enhance counter-terrorism cooperation
between our officials. This foresight in entering into the MOU will
be very useful in the days and weeks ahead enabling officials from
the Australian Federal Police and ASIO to work cooperatively with
their Indonesian counterparts in tracking down the perpetrators
of these terrible acts.
Australia has also strengthened its counter-terrorism
cooperation with other countries in the region. We have signed Memoranda
of Understanding on cooperation to combat international terrorism
with Malaysia and Thailand. These MOUs are umbrella agreements that
set out a framework for bilateral cooperation in law enforcement,
defence, intelligence, customs and immigration. We are looking forward
to concluding similar arrangements with other countries in the region.
We have been engaged in intelligence sharing with
other countries in the region. And through our involvement in the
United Nations, IMF, the Asia Pacific Group on Money Laundering
and the Financial Action Task Force, we have been working actively
to counter the financing of terrorism, regionally and globally.
Australians are enmeshed in the rich tapestry of Asia,
as Asia is an increasingly important influence on Australia. Moments
of crisis highlight our common destiny. In 1997 it was a financial
crisis. Today it is a human tragedy. At these points of crisis we
must not withdraw. We must heighten our engagement and our cooperation.
We must work together. Australia stands ready to do so.
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