Next steps to ease barriers to Asia-Pacific trade are urgently needed to enable businesses to realize their digitally-driven growth potential and ensure the region’s economic momentum, according to APEC officials and the private sector.
The implications are particularly acute for small firms that drive job creation and wages, and which are only beginning to take advantage of the market reach that new technologies allow, agreed delegatess...
Their assessment sets the tone for the year’s first meeting of the APEC Business Advisory Council underway in Auckland, New Zealand through this weekend to generate trade policy recommendations for the APEC member economies.
“There are around 100 million formal small businesses in APEC and roughly five per cent are importing or exporting and another five per cent are involved in trade indirectly via larger companies or supply chains, ... If we are able to break barriers and position more businesses to benefit from regional growth drivers using digital advances, it could be the next revolution,... that could integrate remote areas, more women in businesses and more informal firms into the new economy.”
There are signs that collaboration between APEC economies and the private sector to open up intellectual property protection, client tracking, marketing, payments and security online is moving things in this direction but that more work lies ahead...
Infrastructure gaps, shipping costs and mismatching standards requirements in areas such as product labelling are compounding digital access and data management challenges for the region’s emerging small businesses...
“The new economy is accelerating but when it comes to nuts and bolts, there are painful issues to overcome, ... It is important that APEC move quickly to smooth cross-border trade flows to turn business losses into gains for small firms and inclusive growth in the region.”...
This was excerpted from 2 February 2018 news release by APEC.