Call for open markets as world leaders gather in Singapore

Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad (R) shakes hands with Singaporean counterpart Lee Hsien Loong during a meeting at the Istana on the sidelines of the 33rd ASEAN summit in Singapore on November 12, 2018. Photo: FELINE LIM / POOL / AFP
Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad (R) shakes hands with Singaporean counterpart Lee Hsien Loong during a meeting at the Istana on the sidelines of the 33rd ASEAN summit in Singapore on November 12, 2018. Photo: FELINE LIM / POOL / AFP

Singapore’s prime minister made an impassioned plea Monday for open markets and warned “political pressures” were driving countries apart, in a swipe at rising protectionism at the start of a gathering of world leaders.

Leaders including Chinese Premier Li Keqiang and US Vice President Mike Pence are meeting this week in the city-state against the backdrop of a months-long trade dispute between Beijing and Washington.

Some of those attending are expected to announce major progress on a massive China-backed trade deal that excludes the US, in a rebuke to President Donald Trump’s increasingly unilateralist approach to international commerce.

Trump is skipping the annual summit — which was regularly attended by his predecessor Barack Obama — in a sign of how far he has withdrawn from attempts to shape the global rules of trade and raising new questions about Washington’s commitment to Asia.

Addressing a business forum ahead of this week’s main meetings, Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong called for Southeast Asian companies to invest more in each others’ markets and be more open to foreign competition.

“The more integrated and open our markets are, and the more conducive our rules and business environments to foreign investment, the larger the pie will grow, and the more we will all benefit,” he said.

The 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) “has great potential, but fully realizing it depends on whether we choose to become more integrated and work resolutely towards this goal in a world where multilateralism is fraying under political pressures”.

The US-China trade dispute has seen Trump slap higher tariffs on roughly half of Chinese imports, and Beijing retaliated with its own levies.

The standoff is having an impact far beyond the world’s top two economies, and leaders at the four days of meetings will be keen to voice their grievances to Pence, who is participating in Trump’s place, and Li.

Many of those attending are expected to send a message in support of free trade by announcing major progress on the China-backed deal, the 16-member Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP).

With the US having pulled out of rival pact the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), the RCEP is now the world’s biggest trade deal.

The pact — which is less ambitious than the TPP in areas such as employment and environmental protection — groups the 10 ASEAN members plus China, India, Japan, South Korea, Australi, and New Zealand.

Dr. M drops by

On the agenda today for PM Lee as well is hosting Malaysian Prime Minister Tun Dr. Mahathir Mohamad, who started his two-day official visit to Singapore this morning. He was accorded an official welcome at the Istana before paying a courtesy call on President Halimah Yacob and a meeting with PM Lee.

“There will be some differences, there will also be competition… But the competition is always healthy,” Dr. Mahathir noted about Singapore-Malaysia relations at an official lunch at the Istana, Yahoo News reported.

“It helps us to make an effort, to win. It only helps us to grow even faster,” he added.

PM Lee also presented an orchid named after the Malaysian prime minister and his wife, so that’s nice.

Dr. Mahathir is scheduled to meet the Malaysian diaspora at Shangri La Hotel today and will attend the 33rd ASEAN Summit tomorrow.

 

Additional reporting by Coconuts Singapore



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