Son, who is also Vice Chairman of the National Committee on APEC 2017 and Chair of the Senior Officials' Meeting (SOM) APEC 2017, said after nearly two decades of joining the APEC Forum, this is the second time Vietnam has been assigned to host the event, reflecting the international community’s trust in the country.

The hosting of the APEC Year 2017 creates a great opportunity for Vietnam to strengthen relations with regional partners and enhance its role and position in the international arena, he said, describing the APEC Year 2017 as the largest external event hosted by Vietnam from now to 2020.

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 Deputy Foreign Minister Bui Thanh Son

Close to 200 activities of different scales focusing on the theme “Creating a new driving force for a common future” will take place across 10 cities and provinces from the north to the south during this year, with the most important event – the APEC High-level Week – to be held in the central coastal city of Da Nang in November, he noted.

Vietnam embarked on the preparations for the event three years ago, Son said, adding that the country had actively exchanged views and coordinated with the previous hosts of APEC in 2014 and 2015 to learn their experience in the field.

The National Committee on APEC 2017 was established in July 2015 under the chair of Deputy Prime Minister, Foreign Minister Pham Binh Minh and the involvement of 24 ministries, agencies and localities, he added.

The establishment of five sub-committees in charge of contents, facilities and logistics, security and health, communication and culture, and reception is essential to ensuring the overall coordination of all preparatory steps, Son said.

Vietnam has soon completed long-term oriented documents for preparing the event from ing locations to host the APEC High-level Week and other main activities this year, as well as proposing the theme and priorities for the function.

Son also highlighted challenges in the APEC Year 2017 amid regional and global complicated and unpredictable developments.

According to the Deputy Foreign Minister, the biggest obstacle for APEC member nations in general and Vietnam in particular is how to maintain the APEC Forum’s role as a leading economic connectivity and cooperation mechanism in the region to fuel the growth and prosperity in the Asia-Pacific.

The other challenge is to accelerate trade and investment liberalization in the region, including the realization of the “Bogor Goals” by 2020 as scheduled, in the context that protectionism is emerging in a number of economies.

Another defiance is to increase the forum’s contributions to the settlement of global challenges such as generating jobs, narrowing inequality, coping with climate change, preventing terrorism, ensuring food security, and addressing aging population and migration crisis.

However, the above-said situation will also open up new opportunities for cooperation among the forum member economies, Son said, noting that the demand for cooperation and connectivity between regions and between Asian-Pacific countries is increasing as the regional and world peaceful environment and development are being threatened.

After nearly three decades of development, the number of APEC committees and working groups has increased by three folds to about 50, covering various fields, from economic affairs, trade, sustainable development, narrowing development gap, and food and energy security.

The Asia-Pacific has remained a leading region in terms of dynamic development with many member economies playing a key role in boosting global economic growth and connectivity, Son said.

With the principles of win-win and voluntary cooperation, the APEC Forum is pioneering in the liberalization of trade and investment, which supports small-and medium-sized enterprises to increase their competitiveness and join global supply value chains and digital economy.

The regional trade facilitation has also reaped positive results, helping to reduce trade transaction costs between the APEC member economies by 12 percent between 2010 and 2014, he cited.

Vietnam is one of the leading APEC member economies in terms of economic growth and regional connectivity, Son said, adding that despite the global economic downturn in the first eight months of 2016, Vietnam was still among few APEC economies which successfully maintained the export growth.

The Vietnamese Government is comprehensively and synchronously speeding up reform and economic restructuring in combination with changing the growth model.

With the engagement in such large-scale free trade agreements as the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), and Free Trade Agreement (FTA) with the Eurasian Economic Union, Vietnam has become an important link in an extensive economic connectivity network of 59 partners, including 18 APEC members, he added.

Source: VNA