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Asia-Pacific leaders call for shared trade benefits as Apec summit concludes

1 Nov 2025, 8:25 AM
Asia-Pacific leaders call for shared trade benefits as Apec summit concludes

GYEONGJU (South Korea), Nov 1 — Facing deepening fractures in the global trade order, Asia-Pacific leaders adopted a joint declaration that emphasised the need for resilience and shared benefits in trade at the end of the annual Apec Summit on Saturday.

The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation leaders summit, hosted by South Korea this year, unfolded under the shadow of rising geopolitical tensions and aggressive economic strategies — ranging from US tariffs to China's export controls — that have pressured global trade.

Ahead of the gathering, US President Donald Trump announced trade deals with a number of countries, including China and South Korea, but left before the summit kicked off.

Washington's views were, however, still on display in the declaration, analysts said, which, unlike last year's document, did not mention multilateralism or the World Trade Organisation (WTO).

"It is a result of member countries acknowledging, at least to some degree, that it will be difficult to restore a free trade order based on multilateralism and the WTO," said Heo Yoon, a professor of international trade at Sogang University in Seoul.

"We cannot deny anymore that there is a paradigm shift in the global trade order," he added.

With Trump's swift exit before the leaders' summit, China positioned itself as a steady advocate of free and open trade, a role the US has dominated for decades. China will host Apec in Shenzhen in 2026, Chinese President Xi Jinping announced.

However, Heo and analysts say the joint declaration suggests that member nations were wary of giving an impression that the US was undermining free trade while picturing China as a guardian of multilateralism.

"Few countries believe there can be a new trade order that excludes the US," he said.

South Korea's Lee hosts Xi Jinping

China's Xi will wrap up his three-day visit to South Korea on Saturday with a state dinner and summit hosted by President Lee Jae Myung, the newly-elected US ally who has pledged to balance Seoul's ties with Beijing.

The stakes are high for Lee, who assumed office in June following the ouster of his hawkish predecessor over a failed attempt to impose martial law. Lee faces the dual challenge of protecting South Korea's export-driven economy and lowering tensions with North Korea amid rising China-US competition.

Lee said it was difficult to say that relations between Seoul and Beijing had ever been completely normalised, and he hoped for a substantial improvement.

"We must go beyond simple restoration to find a path of cooperation that is beneficial to each other," Lee told a press conference ahead of his planned meeting with Xi.

Earlier this week, Lee also hosted Trump for a rushed state visit, showering him with gifts and praise before announcing a surprise trade deal aimed at lowering US tariffs in return for billions of dollars in South Korean investment in the US.

Lee is set to hold similar events for Xi on Saturday, including a summit meeting and state dinner. This is Xi's first visit to South Korea in 11 years.

Seoul is a key US military ally, hosting thousands of American troops and relying on the US nuclear umbrella for protection from nuclear-armed North Korea. Yet its economy is deeply entwined with not just the US, but also China, which has grown increasingly challenging for South Korean companies and wields influence over North Korea.

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