A MEETING- MINDS. The following is an excerpt from Learning From Experience

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tt.ai1l1 I UM\JUN rvi\l) EAST-WESTCENTER 1601 EAST WES A MEETING- MINDS Volume VIII, Number 1 January 2001 Learning From Experience The First APIAN Policy Report November 2000 The APEC International Assessment Network (APIAN) project issued its first major policy report, Learning From Experience prior to the Brunei Leaders Meeting. The consensus document contained 12 major recommendations for improving APEC performance, and was signed by 22 experts from 13 APEC member economies. The APEC Secretariat and Brunei Chair offices distributed 150 copies of the "Policy Report" to the leaders and ministerial delegations attending the Brunei Leaders Meeting November 16, 2000, and to the assembled media. APIAN participants circulated the Report to their home constituencies, and by all reports the recommendations were well received. Learning From Experience and the associated press release, has been posted on the websites of the APEC Secretariat, the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (ISEAS) and Monash University, among other APEC Study Center sites. Monash has informed non-apian APEC Study Centers ofthe publication. APIAN is now firmly established in the APEC lexicon and is listed in the APEC Secretariat's list ofapec abbreviations. At a workshop held in Singapore in October, where the APIAN Report was finalized, participants agreed to prepare their "Issue Reports" for publication in an edited volume under the auspices of the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. In addition, ISEAS and APIAN are planning to convene an APEC Roundtable in the Spring 2001. The following is an excerpt from Learning From Experience APIAN Executive Summary The APEC International Assessment Network (APIAN) is a collaborative, independent project among participating APEC Study Centers to track and assess the design and execution of select APEC initiatives. APIAN's mission is to enhance knowledge among government officials and the general public with regard to APEC activities, to encourage the fulfillment of APEC objects and commitments, and to identify ways for APEC to improve its performance. Trade and Investment Liberalization and Facilitation (TILF) APIAN attributes the apparent lack of value-added of APEC's TILF to several factors including the slow adaptation of the APEC agenda, the absence of priorities, shortfalls in member commitments, weak evaluation procedures, and the dearth of specific APEC incentives. To enhance APEC's performance on TILF, APIAN recommends: 1 - APEC should clarify and prioritize some of its trade policy initiatives. In

Volume VIII, Number 1, January 2001 some complex issue areas, such as services and competition policy, APEC should consider prioritizing select sub-sectors or actionable items. It is also recommended that APEC establish priority areas for immediate progress in trade and investment liberalization, such as national treatment, non-tariff barriers and tariff peaks and export subsidies. 2. APEC should continue to improve its Individual Actions Plans (laps). TAP commitments should be specific, concrete and measurable to the extent possible. 3. APEC members should be accountable for their lap commitments. APEC should establish effective mechanisms - both internal and external to APEC for the review of members' TAP commitments and implementation. The TAP peer reviews should call for more rigorous commentaries. APEC should continue to call upon outside, independent experts to evaluate its TILF programmes. Economic and Technical Cooperation (Ecotech) Ecotech is critical to the realization of APEC's vision and the economic development of APEC members. Yet, Ecotech suffers from a number of shortcomings, including the excessive diffusion of limited Ecotech resources, the proliferation of Ecotech forums, the lack of coordination around defined APEC objectives, inadequate authority allowed the Ecotech Subcommittee, and too little funding for Ecotech initiatives. To enable APEC to overcome the current crisis of confidence in its Ecotech programmes, APTAN recommends: APEC should overhaul its Ecotech programmes. APEC needs to streamline Ecotech programmes, to set priorities, to rationalize working groups, and to improve Page 2 coordination among Ecotech forums. The Ecotech Subcommittee should be given more authority and resources to pursue its mandate. 2. Ecotech needs more active funding. APEC should encourage the resource rich multilateral development banks to fund sound Ecotech projects. More organic ties should also be pursued with bilateral donors. Private-sector involvement in specific projects should also be systematically encouraged. It is suggested that consideration be given to establishing "Ecotech Funds" that would use APEC creativity to catalyze financial support from these public and private sources behind APEC priorities. 3. APEC should mandate action plans for Ecotech. Individual and collective action plans should be prepared for Ecotech. To assure coherence and succinctness, such action plans should be restricted to APEC specific programmes and projects. In their individual action plans (TAPs), members should specify both commitments and implementation results, and include timetables and quantifiable targets to the extent possible. Institutional Structures APEC will fall well short of its goals if it does not find a better match between its aspirations and its institutional structures. Therefore, APIAN recommends: The APEC Secretariat should be strengthened. A stronger Secretariat that has more in-house capacity to monitor implementation of APEC initiatives can help APEC to better evaluate, rationalize and coordinate both TTLF and Ecotech. To strengthen the Secretariat, APIAN the creation of longer-term professional positions and the designation of a Secretary General with a multi-year term of office are proposed. APEC should deepen its ties with other international and regional organizations

Volume VUl, Number 1, January 2001 APIAN urges Ecotech to seek support from multilateral development banks that share APEC objectives. TILF forums should deepen their relations with the World Trade Organization and other relevant multilateral forums. APEC should consult more routinely with other regional arrangements, such that their gains in liberalization are constructively nested under APEC. 3. Ministries of Finance should be better integrated into the APEC process. The post financial crisis agenda demands that APEC better integrate finance and development. 4. Partnerships with outside groups should be strengthened. APIAN questionnaires suggest that strong business and civil society participation contributes to successful implementation of APEC initiatives. Business should be involved in all stages of the project cycle. NGO involvement with select working groups, such as those responsible for the environment, human resource development, gender equality and microenterprises, would be particularly beneficial. 5. Academic engagement should be encouraged. To help build a broadly based Pacific community of intellectuals, APEC should reach out more systematically to universities and policy institutes. APIAN - as a voluntary grouping of APEC Study Centers is convinced that APEC can take better advantage of the Centers' capacities and goodwill. 6. APEC should augment its dissemination e/jrts. APIAN questionnaires revealed a stunning lack of public awareness of APEC activities. A better-staffed Secretariat should devote more resources to dissemination and outreach to nongovernmental groups. Broader and more systematic engagement with the private sector and other non-governmental groups would be an important component of an energized effort to broaden APEC's base. For it is only through deep and broad Page 3 dialogue that APEC can realize its core mission - to foster a community or nations and peoples in the Asia Pacific. Dr. Richard Feinburg, Professor and Director, APEC Study Center IRPS/UCSD 9500 Gilman Drive La Jolla, CA 92093-0519 Tel: (858)-534-7627 FAX: (858)-534-3939 E-mail: rfeinburg@ucsd.edu News from Member-Economy APEC Study Centers Australia Australian APEC Study Centre The Australian APEC Study Centre had another busy year during 2000. A major three-year program on insurance and pension regulatory regimes in Asia launched. This program has been endorsed by the APEC Finance Ministers and was commended by the APEC Leaders at their Summit in Brunei in November. The first activity was a successful Symposium, which was held in Manila in November. Further annual symposia and twiceyearly training courses are among the activities that are projected. In June and July the Centre conducted a trade policy course titled "Facilitating Trade and Investment Flows Beyond 2000." Twenty-one participants attended this course from developing APEC economies. During the year the Centre organized conferences on Trade and Labour Rights and on Managing Globalization for Prosperity. In October Mr. Warren Maruyama, a prominent Washington-

Volume All, Number 1 January 2001 based trade expert, delivered the 2000 Monash APEC Lecture, As part of its public education program, the Centre has developed an electronic resource called "Globalisations Guide." This electronic resource is pitched at the senior secondary school level. It argues the cases for and against globalization and contains a select list of links to other Internet resources. It can be accessed at http://www.globalisationguide.org Finally, in December, the Centre was host to the APEC Public/Private Sector Infrastructure Dialogue 2000. Full details of these activities are available at ip://www.apec.org.au P Darby Higgs Australian APEC Study Centre Tel: (613)-9903-8021 E-mail: darby.higgs(hiarts.monash.edu.au Canada APEC Study Centre in Canada The APEC Study Centre in Canada recently published, Cutting Through Red Tape New Directions fbr APEC's Trade Facilitation The report authored by Yuen Pau Woo of the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada (APFC) and John Wilson of The World Bank, is based on a workshop on trade facilitation in APEC organized by the APFC, the World Bank and the government of Canada held in Singapore in September 2000. Cutting red tape would do more to boost Asian trade than reducing tariffs, in a report given to regional trade ministers meeting in Brunei last November 16, 2000. According to a press release, Dr. John D. wiene, President and UJ'J 01 me Asia race Foundation of Canada, commented that, "At a time when APEC's credibility as a regional forum committed to free and open trade and investment is in question, the report argues the grouping could gain new relevance by pushing initiatives in the area of trade facilitation. Studies show that smoother trade procedures can add more than US$ 46 billion to regional economic growth over the next decade, much more than the gain through lower tariffs." Trade facilitation - focusing on such areas as simplification of customs procedures, product standards and technical regulations and increasing the ease with which business and professional staff can move between economies -- has been in the on the back burner of APEC's activities. Page 4 A survey of business people in the APEC economies showed that customs procedures and restrictive administrative regulations are more serious impediments to trade than tariffs. The report points to a study of cargo clearance times at Tanjung Perak port in Indonesia carried out by the World Customs Organization. The study found that the formal tariff assessment process for certain shipments took an average of 6.4 minutes, compared to 159 hours and 23 minutes for other activities involved in cargo clearance. The main sources of delay included incomplete documents; red tape involved in releasing goods from warehouses; documentation errors; payment hold-ups; and "deliberate delays" in delivery, even after the release of goods by customs officials. Cutting red tape inhibiting trade will generate significant gains for member economies, the report notes. "The APEC Economic Committee has estimated that trade facilitation measures committed to date will add 0.25% of real GDP to APEC (or about US $46 billion in 1997 prices) by 2010, compared to economic gains from trade liberalization measures (tariff removal) amounting to 0,16% of real GDP (about US $30 billion)." The press release said that the report recommends five areas where APEC can move forward on easing the regulatory burden on trade:

Volume VIII, Number 1, January 2001.. 1. Establish a high-level trade facilitation focus, which includes a development perspective; 2 Renew trade facilitation objectives and establish performance targets rather than looking to measure inputs only; 3. Encourage senior officials from "trade facilitation" line departments and development agencies and not just from trade and foreign affairs ministries, to be more engaged in APEC fora; 4. Ensure trade facilitation is a priority in technical assistance; 5 Invest in trade facilitation research and capacity building. Dr. Yuen Pau Woo Director APEC Study Centre in Canada E-mail: yuenkapfc.apfnet.org USA 1 U S Consortium ofapec Study Centers University of Hawaii APEC Study Center (UHASC) In cooperation with the University of Hawaii and the Telephone Organization of Thailand, the Thai APEC Electronic Commerce Training Center organized a two-day workshop on E-commerce Technologies. The workshop was held on September 7-8, 2000, with participation from Thailand, India, Australia, U.S., Korea, the Philippines, Singapore and Chinese Taipei. Prof. Tung Bui, co-director of the University of Hawaii APEC Study Center, discussed business and marketing strategies for e- commerce, focusing on developing economies. With the cooperation of the University of Hawaii, Thailand received a US$142,000 grant to conduct a survey on the current status of e- Page 5 commerce in APEC developing economies. The University of Hawaii APEC Study Center will act as the primary research partner and will host Thai researchers to conduct the survey, and to produce an e-commerce tutorial for dissemination within the APEC economies. Dr. Tung Bui Matson Navigation Co. Distinguished Professor APEC Study Center, Co-Director College of Business Administration University ofhawaii Honolulu, HI 96822 Tel: (808) 956-5565 Fax: (808) 956-9889 E-mail: tbui@cba.hawaii.edu http://ec.cba.hawaii.edu/tbui APEC Study Center The East-West Seminars program recently held the Asia Pacific Conference on E-commerce, October 30-November 1, 2000 and the Asia Pacific Executive Forum - Doing Business in a Changing Asia: A Strategic Vision, January 16-19, 2001. The Jbllowing is a brief description of both activities: Asia Pacific Conference on E-Commerce Co-sponsored by the 's East- West Seminars program and Pennsylvania State University's Institute for Information Policy, the conference was held in Honolulu at the East-West Center, October 30-November 1, 2000. Electronic commerce, the fastest growing business sector in the world, is widely recognized as a key factor of national and regional economic growth in Asia Pacific. At the same time, its rapid spread has raised many difficult business, legal and policy issues. This conference brought together prominent representatives from e-

Volume VIII, Number 1, January 2001 commerce, telecommunications and IT industries in Asia, the Pacific and the United States for three days of intensive discussions on the impacts and implications of the New Economy. The "2nd Asia Pacific Conference on E- commerce: Investment Opportunities and E- Business Models in Asian Emerging Markets" is scheduled for October 28-30, 2001, East-West Center, Honolulu. Asia Pacific Executive Forum Doing Business in a Changing Asia A Strategic Vision 'Seminars' followed by 'Business Professionals.' Copies of the conference summary reports for both conferences are available. Please contact: East-West Seminars 1601 East-West Road Honolulu, Hawaii 96848 U.S.A. Tel: 1-808-944-7384 Fax: 1-808-944-7600 E-mail: seminars@eastwestcenter.org Website: www.eastwestcenter.org The in partnership with Frost & Sullivan, held the Executive Forum in Honolulu at the, January 16-19, 2001. The Center's Executive Forum provides opportunities for corporate leaders to gain insight into the major issues of the Asia Pacific region from leading industry experts and scholars. Designed as a corporate retreat, the Executive Forum brought together senior executives, government policymakers and academic experts for two days of intensive dialogue on critical issues facing the region and how they impact economics and business. The Executive Forum provides the private sector with a neutral and objective venue to exchange views and to brainstorm on key issues relating to the future economic and political outlook in Asia Pacific. As current events have shown, the dynamics of the region require up-todate insights into and analysis of the impacts of the rapid changes taking place. The Asia Pacific Executive Forum provides an opportunity for corporate decision-makers to be better informed of critical developments and their impacts for strategic planning. A second Asia Pacific Executive Forum is scheduled for Spring 2002. is published by the EAST-WEST CENTE APEC Study Center For more information contact: Charles E. Morrison E-mail: morrisoc@eastwestcenter.org Telephone: 1-808-944-7384 Fax: 1-808-944-7600 This issue was edited by: Butch V. Dela Cruz (delacrub@eastwestcenter.org) and Sheree Groves (grovess(ãjeastwestcenter. org) For more information on the E-commerce conference and the Executive Forum, please visit our website: www.eastwestcenter.org. Click on Page 6