15 Dec 2011 (Singapore) - Despite the fact that the services sector accounts for 68 percent of value-add in the Asia-Pacific region, there is little known about the services sector and has been the neglected component of international trade. It also accounts for 61 percent of employment in the region, up from mere 27 percent when the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) was founded in 1989. While the services sector has come to dominate the modern economy, international trade in services lags behind and the exports of goods among the APEC member economies are five times larger than exports of services although both sectors have grown by almost 115 percent over the last decade. These are the key messages contained in the new publication being released by the Pacific Economic Cooperation Council (PECC) and the Asian Development Bank Institute (ADBI), Services Trade: Approaches for the 21st Century.
Prospect for Growth in Energy Trade from North America to East Asia
29 Sept 2011 (Washington D.C.) - Even though oil and gas is the most traded product in the Asia-Pacific region, there is virtually no energy trae across the Pacific. A new report released today in Washington D.C. by the Pacific Economic Cooperation Council (PECC) suggests that this anomaly could be corrected in the foreseeable future.
Asia-Pacific Opinion Leaders Gloomy on Economic Outlook
29 Sept 2011 (Washington D.C.) - Eighty percent of Asia-Pacific opinion-leaders believe the US and the European Union are headed for slower growth in the next 12 months. This finding is from an annual survey of senior policy-makers, executives, academics, and media from 22 Asia-Pacific economies conducted by the Pacific Economic Cooperation Council (PECC).
Focus on New Growth Strategies for Asia-Pacific Economies