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Asia: An engine for global growth Syed Amin Jafri in Hyderabad | May 05, 2006 13:39 IST Last Updated: May 05, 2006 15:39 IST Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh on Friday said that other Asian countries could learn from the economic successes of their peers, particularly China, to foster growth and tackle protracted problems faced by them. In his inaugural address at the opening session of 39th annual meeting of board of governors of the Asian Development Bank in Hyderabad, Dr Singh had a word of praise for China. "There is scope for peer learning within the Asian region from the successes of other countries. The Chinese economy has performed exceedingly well over the last two decades, demonstrating that growth rates which are the envy of most other countries. This has helped vast millions of people to be pulled out of the grip of acute poverty," he said. Further, the growth of the Chinese economy has fuelled demand for products and services of other countries and China, in many ways, has become an engine of growth for the world economy. "There is a lot to learn from the Chinese economic experience and the ADB can certainly facilitate it," he observed. The Prime Minister said that the Asian region has become an engine of global growth in recent years. The United States and Europe would continue to display considerable resilience and would remain important drivers of global growth. "However, East and South-east Asia, including India, are bound to increase their profile and relevance to the global economy," he forecast Asia would continue to increase its share of world GDP and trade, both as a source of export supply and as a source of import demand. Asia would consume more food and more energy. Asia would demand better infrastructure and seek improved services. "Given the potential for investment demand in the region, we must find ways of making better use of our savings and surpluses generated in our region," he said. "For the past quarter century, Asia is once again on the move. Millions of people in our region have been liberated from poverty, ignorance and disease. If we can sustain this growth process, and ensure that it is equitable, we can banish poverty for all times to come. If we can pursue economic development in the framework of an open economy and an open, democratic society, we would have succeeded in restoring Asia to its ancient glory as the land for knowledge, wisdom, creativity and compassion," Dr Singh observed. Manmohan Singh mooted the idea of Pan Asian Free Trade Area and suggested Asian Development Bank to study the benefits of such an economic agglomeration in Asia.
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