How ASEAN+3 can lift economic co-op
2026-04-11 10:11:03 source:Global Times

Illustration: Liu Xidan/GT
Focusing
on the regional macroeconomic situation and key issues of financial
cooperation, the ASEAN+3 Finance and Central Bank Deputies Meeting was
held on Wednesday, according to a statement published on the website of
China's Ministry of Finance.
Participants reviewed the
arrangements related to the ASEAN+3 Macroeconomic Research Office
(AMRO), the Chiang Mai Initiative Multilateralization (CMIM), and the
Asian Bond Markets Initiative (ABMI).
Amid rising global
uncertainty and multiple pressures on regional economies, the meeting
not only reaffirmed the cooperative foundation of the ASEAN+3 mechanism
but also sent a clear signal: In the face of intensifying external
headwinds, all parties need to push cooperation and exchanges further
with a greater sense of urgency if they are to firmly seize the
initiative for development amid such profound changes.
Since its
establishment, the ASEAN, China, Japan and South Korea (10+3)
cooperation mechanism has continuously strengthened its crisis response
capabilities, promoted the process of economic integration, and worked
together to build the momentum of new growth drivers. Remarkable
achievements have been made across various fields, helping East Asia
become one of the most dynamic regions in the world.
Relying on
institutional opening-up arrangements such as the Regional Comprehensive
Economic Partnership (RCEP), the level of trade and investment
liberalization and facilitation within the region has continued to rise.
The flows of goods, technology, people and other factors have become
smoother, industrial and supply chains have become deeply intertwined,
and a closely connected community of shared interests has taken shape.
The steady progress of various institutional mechanisms, including in
the financial field, has also provided important support for the region
to withstand external shocks.
According to AMRO's latest report,
ASEAN+3 has become more regionally anchored over the past two decades,
with denser and more interconnected production networks and a decisive
shift toward intraregional sources of demand. The share of the region's
value-added exports to the US has declined from about one-third to 20
percent, while the share absorbed within the region has risen to nearly
30 percent. This structural change profoundly reflects the trend of the
East Asian economy shifting from external dependence toward regional
demand-driven growth, which also means that intraregional cooperation
and coordination are becoming more and more crucial.
At this
critical transformation juncture, strengthening all-round exchanges and
cooperation within the region is not only a practical need to stabilize
the existing industrial and supply chains but also an inevitable
requirement to promote industrial upgrading and cultivate new growth
drivers. Whether it is unblocking trade channels, optimizing the
investment environment, promoting the coordinated development of
emerging fields such as the digital economy and the green economy, or
jointly responding to challenges such as inflationary pressures and
fluctuations in external demand, it is inseparable from close
communication and coordinated efforts among all countries. Only through
continuous deepening of cooperation can we release cooperation
dividends, and enhance the overall risk resistance capacity of the
region.
For instance, the implementation of the RCEP has
significantly reduced barriers to the flow of goods and services, and
the key next step is how to carry out closer coordination and planning
around the restructuring of the global industrial chain. In response to
the investment transfer trend brought about by industrial chain
adjustments, ASEAN+3 economies need to strengthen dialogue and
coordination on investment policies within the framework, avoid vicious
competition, and help form a more resilient and competitive regional
industrial ecosystem.
In addition to industrial coordination,
financial cooperation, as an important pillar of regional cooperation,
also needs continuous upgrading to adapt to the development needs under
the new situation.
The experience of the past few decades has
proved that openness, inclusiveness and pragmatic cooperation are
effective approaches to respond to crises. Today, standing at the
critical crossroads of industrial chain restructuring, all parties in
ASEAN+3 need to deepen exchanges and cooperation across various
dimensions, enabling East Asia to remain a stable anchor and a driving
force for world economic growth.