ASEAN businesses
optimistic about what’s next
Southeast
Asia sees brighter future in shifting global economy, integrated ASEAN
Community
Despite the fact that global business optimism has declined, optimism in
At this time last
year, business optimism in the ASEAN economies stood at net 25 percent.
However, the
picture heading into 2014 is markedly different with optimism in the ASEAN
rising to 45 percent, driven by improvements in
With ongoing
political unrest, optimism in
“We’re braced for
a momentum shift in the global business dynamics as we enter 2014. Things
seem to be improving quite markedly in ASEAN,” said Ken Atkinson, managing
partner at Grant Thornton.
“The contrast from
12 months ago is stark – as business leaders plan for 2014, optimism in the
ASEAN looks more robust however uncertainty is growing in some countries.”
But revenue
prospects across ASEAN have fallen from 59 percentage points 12 months ago to
54 percent now.
In
By contrast,
Atkinson said
growth prospects in the ASEAN looked markedly different a year ago.
“More recently we
have seen growth return to these economies as unemployment falls and consumer
spending rises,” he said.
“Consequently
businesses are seeing renewed demand for their goods and services but this
does not appear to be translating into confidence in revenue or profit
growth.”
Expectations for
employment, investment and salaries have recovered to 37 percent in the ASEAN
after a slowdown from Q1 to Q3 last year.
However Thai
business leaders are more pessimistic than their peers in the
Atkinson said
ASEAN countries are moving toward a more balanced regional economy with fewer
extremes.
“This should
support business growth prospects; greater balance and less volatility means
businesses can plan for the future and make decisions with greater
certainty," he said.
ASEAN countries
include
The ten-nation
bloc is looking forwards to establishing the ASEAN Community in 2015 with
stronger regional economic integration.
At a summit last
October, Nyan Lynn, Deputy Secretary-General of ASEAN said ASEAN has made
progress in implementing the ASEAN Community blueprint and that the leaders
of the bloc have been encouraged by the enhanced progress in external
relations as well as greater solidarity among the member nations.
An average of 82.5
percent of all action lines towards the ASEAN Community 2015 have been
completed or are being implemented—representing 78 percent of the pillars for
the political security, 79.7 percent of economic pillars and 90 percent of
socio-cultural pillars, he said.
The ASEAN leaders
also adopted the “Bandar Seri Begawan Declaration on the ASEAN Community
Post-2015 Vision” where they tasked relevant bodies with further articulating
ASEAN’s vision of a community that is “not only politically cohesive,
economically integrated, socially responsible but also truly people-oriented,
people centered, and rules-based.”
The ASEAN Economic
Community (AEC), the goal of regional economic integration by 2015, envisages
key characteristics including a single market and production base, a highly
competitive economic region, a region of equitable economic development, and
a region fully integrated into the global economy.
The AEC areas of
cooperation include human resources development and capacity building;
recognition of professional qualifications; closer consultation on
macroeconomic and financial policies; trade financing measures; enhanced
infrastructure and communications connectivity; development of electronic
transactions through e-ASEAN; integrating industries across the region to
promote regional sourcing; and enhancing private sector involvement for the
building of the AEC.
In short, the AEC
aims to transform ASEAN into a region with free movement of goods, services,
investment, skilled labor, and freer flow of capital.
By Vietweek Staff, Thanh Nien News
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Chủ Nhật, 12 tháng 1, 2014
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