China,
Russia sound alarm on world economy at APEC summit
China and Russia
sounded the alarm about the state of the global economy at a summit
on Saturday and urged Asian-Pacific countries to protect themselves
by forging deeper regional economic ties.
8
September, 2012
Chinese
President Hu Jintao said Beijing would do all it could to strengthen
the 21-member Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) and boost
prospects of a global recovery by rebalancing its economy, Asia's
biggest.
Russian
President Vladimir Putin said trade barriers must be smashed down. He
is hosting the event on a small island linked to the Pacific port of
Vladivostok by a spectacular new bridge, a symbol of Moscow's pivotal
turn to Asia away from debt-stricken Europe.
"It's
important to build bridges, not walls. We must continue striving for
greater integration," Putin told APEC leaders seated at a round
table in a room with a view of the $1 billion cable-stayed bridge,
the largest of its kind.
"The
global economic recovery is faltering. We can overcome the negative
trends only by increasing the volume of trade in goods and services
and enhancing the flow of capital."
China's
Hu told business leaders before the summit the world economy was
being hampered by "destabilizing factors and uncertainties"
and the crisis that hit in 2008-09 was far from over. Beijing would
play its role, he said, in strengthening the recovery.
"We
will work to maintain the balance between keeping steady and robust
growth, adjusting the economic structure and managing inflation
expectations," he said.
Hu
spelled out plans for China, whose economic growth has slowed as
Europe's debt crisis worsened, to pump $157 billion into
infrastructure investments in agriculture, energy, railways and
roads. Hu, who steps down as China's leader in the autumn after a
Communist Party congress, promised continuity and stability for the
economy.
Putin,
who has just begun a new six-year term as president, said on Friday
Russia would be a stable energy supplier and a gateway to Europe for
Asian countries, and also pledged to develop his country's
transportation network.
Gazprom,
Russia's state-controlled gas export monopoly, signed an agreement
with Japan to develop plans for a $7 billion liquefied natural gas
plant on Russia's Pacific coast, underscoring Moscow's eastward
shift.
RUSSIA
LOOKS EAST
The
relative strength of China's economy, by far the largest in Asia and
second in the world to the United States, is key to Russia's decision
to look to the Pacific Rim as it seeks to develop its economy and
Europe battles economic problems.
APEC,
which includes the United States, Japan, South Korea, Indonesia and
Canada, groups countries which account for 40 percent of the world's
population, 54 percent of its economic output and 44 percent of
trade.
APEC
members are broadly showing relatively strong growth, but boosting
trade and growth is vital for the group as it tries to remove the
trade barriers that hinder investment.
"It
is absolutely clear that the most important region for economic
growth this decade - and probably the next decade - will be the
Pacific," said Mexican President Felipe Calderon.
The
European Union has been at odds with both China and Russia over trade
practices it regards as limiting free competition. Cooperation in
APEC is also hindered by territorial and other disputes among some of
the members.
Putin,
59, limped slightly as he greeted leaders at the summit. Aides said
he had merely pulled a muscle. Underlining Putin's good health, a
spokesman said he had a "very active lifestyle."
Discussions
at the two-day meeting focused on food security and trade
liberalization. An agreement was reached before the summit to slash
import duties on technologies that can promote economic growth
without endangering the environment.
Breakthroughs
are not expected on other trade issues at the meeting, from which
U.S. President Barack Obama is absent. He has been attending the
Democratic Party convention and Washington is represented by
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
Clinton
said after talks with Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov that the U.S.
government was working with Congress to pass legislation needed to
upgrade trade ties with Russia, which recently joined the World Trade
Organisation.
Tensions
persisted between the two former Cold War foes over Iran and Syria,
however, and Clinton had only a short meeting with Putin late on day
one of the summit, which culminated in a lavish firework show over
Vladivostok's harbor that was reported in the Russian media to have
cost nearly $10 million.
Also
missing the summit was Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard, who
went home after learning her father had died.
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