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..Press
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UNESCAP News Services
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Date 16
May 2005
Press Release No: G/CS61/07/2005
Policy Statement by Mr. Kim Hak-Su
Executive Secretary of the
Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific
Monday, 16 May 2005
Mr. Chairman, Honourable Ministers,
Excellencies, Distinguished Representatives,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
It is an honour and a privilege to welcome you
to the Ministerial Segment of the sixty-first Commission session
in Bangkok. A year ago, we met at the historic sixtieth session
of the Commission in Shanghai and adopted the Shanghai Declaration,
which has been guiding us in our activities. Let me inform you
of what has been done during the ensuing period and highlight
where we are going.
The year 2005 began with attention focused on
the tsunami catastrophe of 26 December 2004, with the United
Nations playing a central role in coordinating relief and recovery.
Countries in the region also suffered from other natural disasters
such as earthquakes, typhoons, floods and a drought, reinforcing
the need for improvements in disaster preparedness and management.
These natural disasters will prove a constraint on economic
development as a result of the destruction of human, social
and physical capital, as well as infrastructure. The tsunami
and other natural disasters highlighted the extreme vulnerability
of disadvantaged sectors of poor communities. For this reason,
the High-level Panel on Tsunami Recovery Development is being
held this morning to share experiences and learn about the continuing
challenges in rehabilitation and reconstruction.
Despite the tsunami and other disasters, ESCAP economies had
an impressive economic performance in 2004 with a growth rate
of 7.2 per cent, the highest since 2000. The broad-based economic
growth in the region was accompanied in most cases by low inflation
and driven by increased exports, as well as strong domestic
demand, including a revival in capital expenditure and foreign
direct investment. The impressive economic performance reaffirms
the resilience of the regional economy in the face of a series
of on-going and new challenges, the record rises in nominal
crude oil prices, which contributed to a reversal in inflationary
expectations. Prospects for this year, however, indicate a slowdown
in the economic growth of developing countries in the region
to an estimated 6.2 per cent as the external environment weakens.
A rise in inflation and interest rates is likely as higher oil
prices make their impact felt in the general economy. Trade
prospects are expected to be less bright. Countries will have
to respond to the changing economic environment.
In the area of social development, this year's
Economic and Social Survey also highlights the extent of ageing,
which is expected to increase at a faster rate in the next 50
years. By 2050, nearly a quarter of the population in the Asia-Pacific
region will be over 60. A number of countries may well realize
that they still do not have adequate social security systems
for the elderly. Apart from welfare issues, the economic impact
of ageing in terms of labour productivity, savings and investment
and economic growth can be severe if advance planning is not
done. ESCAP is paying special attention to this issue in the
context of the Macau Plan of Action on Ageing for Asia and the
Pacific.
This year’s theme study, Implementing the
Monterrey Consensus in the Asian and Pacific Region: Achieving
Coherence and Consistency, comes at a timely moment as the General
Assembly is preparing for the High-level Dialogue on Financing
for Development in New York in June. The study provides the
regional perspective in the implementation of the Monterrey
Consensus. It notes that, despite high economic growth and the
accumulation of vast foreign reserves, there is a staggering
financing gap, especially in the physical and social infrastructure.
The study recommends greater reliance on South-South regional
cooperation, especially in finance, trade and investment, to
reduce regional disparities. There is also a recommendation
for a feasibility study regarding an Asian Investment Bank along
the lines of the European Investment Bank to meet the region's
urgent need for infrastructure development. It is my hope that
the Ministerial Round Table tomorrow will come up with concrete
proposals in the area of development financing to sustain economic
progress in the region.
Mr. Chairman,
I would like to highlight selected key activities
of ESCAP in the areas of poverty reduction, managing globalization
and emerging social issues. The secretariat continues to focus
attention on assisting the member countries in achieving the
Millennium Development Goals. In September this year, world
leaders will meet at United Nations Headquarters to review the
implementation of the Millennium Declaration adopted by 189
countries at the Millennium Summit of the United Nations five
years ago. In this connection, the second regional MDG report,
jointly undertaken by ESCAP, UNDP and the Asian Development
Bank, will highlight challenges in the delivery of basic services
to the poor and how regional cooperation can be further strengthened
to assist poor countries in achieving the goals by 2015. The
report will be launched in Manila in August 2005 to provide
Asia-Pacific perspectives at the Summit.
In March this year, ESCAP organized the fifth
Ministerial Conference on Environment and Development in Asia
and the Pacific in Seoul. The Conference charted an important
pathway to sustainable development for the region for the next
five years. Bearing in mind the region’s diversity, the
Conference, under the overarching theme of “Achieving
environmentally sustainable economic growth or Green Growth”,
adopted a declaration, a regional implementation plan and the
so-called Seoul Initiative. The challenge is not to limit growth
but to make it environmentally sustainable and create a win-win
synergy between the environment and the economy, so that environmental
sustainability can be promoted as an opportunity rather than
a constraint.
In the area of trade, the ESCAP region has witnessed
the fastest proliferation of regional and bilateral trade agreements,
making an important contribution to development and poverty
reduction. However, it is imperative that regional and bilateral
initiatives not undermine but rather complement the multilateral
trading system. I hope that the proactive role played by various
Asian and Pacific countries in the current negotiations under
the Doha Development Agenda will help contribute to a successful
Doha Round outcome with tangible results before the Sixth WTO
Ministerial Conference, which is scheduled to be held in Hong
Kong in December this year. The stakes are simply too high to
let the Round fail. In preparation for the Conference, ESCAP
plans to organize a High-level Policy Dialogue for Asian and
Pacific senior trade officials, the private sector and other
stakeholders later this year.
Mr. Chairman,
At its sixtieth session, the Commission requested the secretariat
to continue its coordinating role in the regional preparations
for the second phase of the World Summit on the Information
Society, to be held in Tunisia in November 2005. The secretariat
in cooperation with various stakeholders has initiated a number
of activities aimed at formulating a regional action plan towards
an information society and the required infrastructure development
for the Asian information highway. The Plan emphasizes the need
to create an enabling ICT policy environment and build regional
capacity, especially in human resources, to fully use the digital
opportunities provided by ICT for sustainable development.
In a similar vein, ESCAP is working towards the formulation
of an integrated international intermodal transport system,
which could make a significant contribution to advancing economic
and social development. I am pleased to inform the Commission
that eight countries have already ratified the Intergovernmental
Agreement on the Asian Highway Network, which will enter into
force in July this year. A similar agreement on the Trans-Asian
Railway is now being negotiated. In parallel with this work,
the secretariat is working closely with member countries and
other partners to promote the facilitation of international
road transport.
Under the theme of emerging social issues, ESCAP
continues to undertake activities in follow-up to the Beijing
Declaration and Platform for Action and the Biwako Millennium
Framework. A continuing concern is the HIV/AIDS epidemic with
9 million in our region battling the disease. Last year alone,
1.2 million persons were affected, a historic rise. Further
action is required, and I wish to urge a higher level of commitment
of effort and resources to fight the spread of HIV/AIDS in our
region.
Mr. Chairman,
These have been but a sample of the activities
being undertaken by ESCAP to implement the Shanghai Declaration.
In addition to these activities, one of the main goals of the
secretariat is to make ESCAP a "knowledge organization".
To achieve it, we are committed to working with other agencies,
including UNDP and the Asian Development Bank to consider the
possibility of establishing in the longer term a regional knowledge
resource centre that is shared by the three organizations. Work
has begun on the new system to enable us to help to attain our
three-pronged objective of managing globalization, reducing
poverty and addressing emerging social issues. In this way,
we hope to add value to our services to member countries.
Thank you very much for your attention.
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