Outside In | Apec’s quiet cooperation still matters in a noisy, divided world
Year-round, multiple intensive working meetings keep the forum an ‘engine room’ of cooperation, reflecting its commitment to multilateralism

I was first sent by the Apec Business Advisory Council (ABAC) to find out more about the senior officials’ meeting in 2011 during a year of US chairmanship. I had expected the sort of thing that starts after coffee in the morning, gathers 50 or so people around a large rectangular table and finishes with a jovial gala dinner.
What I lumbered into at the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Centre in Washington was a mind-boggling three-dimensional labyrinth of over 80 meetings straddling three weeks without a break for weekends. This was international cooperation on steroids, the awesome “engine room” of trade and economic cooperation spanning economies from Russia to Canada, the United States, Mexico, Peru and Chile.
For the past three decades, thousands of unassuming technocrats have gathered at least three times a year at senior official meetings to oil the wheels of economic cooperation in the Asia-Pacific. They provide living proof of the indispensable value of expert discussion and collaboration.

