- The ASEAN 2045 Vision – Promise… And Pause
It is a carefully crafted document that reflects a welcome sense of ambition and confidence.
At the 46th ASEAN Summit in Kuala Lumpur in May 2025, regional leaders adopted ASEAN 2045: Our Shared Future – a comprehensive vision for the region's development over the next two decades.
It galvanises collective effort. It signals priorities. It invites us to imagine a future worth striving for. But the real measure of such a vision lies not in its length or elegance, but in its capacity to reckon with complexity, to centre people meaningfully, and to commit to structural change. On these fronts, Our Shared Future offers both promise ... and pause.
Having spent much of my career working on regional and global challenges, and as a firm believer in the importance of international and regional cooperation, I recognise the value of vision-setting.
But even as it aspires to build a more 'resilient, innovative, dynamic and people-centred ASEAN,' it leaves important questions unanswered about the foundations upon which such aspirations rest.
Issues such as climate change, pandemic preparedness, digital governance, and rising inequality do not respect institutional boundaries.
While this reflects ASEAN's established architecture, it is increasingly out of step with the interlinked challenges we face today.
The document's most visible structural feature is its division into four strategic pillars: political-security, economic, socio-cultural and connectivity.
Yet Our Shared Future gestures only briefly towards integrated, cross-pillar responses – confined to a single, isolated bullet point on 'a green ASEAN' straddling the economic and socio-cultural pillars.
Need for unified approach
Entirely absent is the need for a unified approach that places health and wellbeing at the core of regional prosperity, peace, and the structural transformations essential for long-term security.
Planetary health determines the wellbeing of all life in this region, yet this essential relationship is not acknowledged in the document. It outlines aspirations for coordination but offers no mechanisms to deliver it.
If ASEAN is serious about addressing the systems-level threats it identifies, including climate, conflict, and displacement, it must move beyond working in silos.
The economic ambitions are clear: to become the world's fourth-largest economy by 2045. There is pride in this trajectory, and rightly so. The region's dynamism is a global success story.
But the blueprint's economic narrative leans heavily on traditional growth indicators – productivity, integration, scale – without enough interrogation of their sustainability or inclusiveness.
Environmental concerns are addressed, but often as secondary considerations. One paragraph on the 'green economy' does not compensate for the lack of clear commitments to decarbonisation, circular economy models, or phasing out fossil fuels.
Nor is there an explicit recognition of planetary boundaries. In a region already bearing the brunt of climate impacts, from sea-level rise to extreme heat and biodiversity loss, this is not just a technical omission. It is a strategic gap. Economic planning for 2045 must be built on ecological realism, not market optimism.
The document rightly reaffirms ASEAN's commitment to democracy, good governance, and human rights. These are essential values for any future that seeks to be genuinely people centred.
Addressing ASEAN's response
But as the region continues to navigate complex political dynamics, including the ongoing crisis in Myanmar, it is striking that the vision does not address how ASEAN will respond when these values are under threat within its own community.
Avoiding difficult issues may (arguably) keep the peace, but it erodes ASEAN's credibility -at home and abroad. A resilient ASEAN must live its Charter, not just cite it, and must stand for something more than branding in calm times and silence in crises.
'People-centred' is one of the most repeated phrases in the vision – welcome, and long overdue. But the document would be stronger if it showed how people's voices shaped its development or how they will be included in its implementation.
There is little indication that ASEAN's citizens were consulted in any structured way in preparing this vision.
Meanwhile, across Southeast Asia, people are already building the future – through climate activism, informal care networks, and digital innovation.
The 4th ASEAN Youth Statement reflects this energy, explicitly calling for planetary health to bridge existing divides. But it raises a question: is this vision only the youth's, and why is it missing from the ASEAN 2045 Vision?
ASEAN's political class must see people not as passive recipients of policy, but as co-creators of regional identity and progress. Without that, 'people-centred' risks becoming a slogan, not a principle.
The call to strengthen the ASEAN Secretariat is, by now, a familiar one. It features in almost every major regional declaration. Yet little progress has been made in translating that sentiment into real investment or reform.
Need for an institutional engine
If ASEAN is to deliver on the commitments laid out in this document, it needs an institutional engine that is fit for purpose; analytically robust, politically empowered, and properly resourced by its 10 Member States. This is not about bureaucracy. It is about credibility.
ASEAN 2045: Our Shared Future is an important and timely document. It articulates a vision of prosperity and cohesion and reflects a maturing regionalism that many of us who have worked across ASEAN for years welcome.
But it also reflects the challenges of a multilateral system that remains cautious – sometimes excessively so – in confronting hard truths.
A shared future cannot be built through declarations alone. It requires difficult conversations, courageous leadership, and deeper engagement with the people whose lives these plans will shape. It demands a willingness to shift power – not merely reassert process.
If ASEAN can rise to this challenge – by investing in institutional reform, embracing ecological stewardship, and engaging its people more directly – it will not only chart a path for itself.
It may offer the world a compelling model of regional cooperation fit for our turbulent times. That is a future worth striving for. And one ASEAN still has time to realise.
-- BERNAMA
Prof Tan Sri Dr Jemilah Mahmood, a physician and experienced crisis leader, is the Executive Director of the Sunway Centre for Planetary Health at Sunway University, Malaysia. She is the founder of MERCY Malaysia and has served in leadership roles internationally with the United Nations and Red Cross for the last decade. She was the 2019 recipient of the ASEAN prize.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Barnama
3 days ago
- Barnama
- The ASEAN 2045 Vision – Promise… And Pause
Opinions on topical issues from thought leaders, columnists and editors. It is a carefully crafted document that reflects a welcome sense of ambition and confidence. At the 46th ASEAN Summit in Kuala Lumpur in May 2025, regional leaders adopted ASEAN 2045: Our Shared Future – a comprehensive vision for the region's development over the next two decades. It galvanises collective effort. It signals priorities. It invites us to imagine a future worth striving for. But the real measure of such a vision lies not in its length or elegance, but in its capacity to reckon with complexity, to centre people meaningfully, and to commit to structural change. On these fronts, Our Shared Future offers both promise ... and pause. Having spent much of my career working on regional and global challenges, and as a firm believer in the importance of international and regional cooperation, I recognise the value of vision-setting. But even as it aspires to build a more 'resilient, innovative, dynamic and people-centred ASEAN,' it leaves important questions unanswered about the foundations upon which such aspirations rest. Issues such as climate change, pandemic preparedness, digital governance, and rising inequality do not respect institutional boundaries. While this reflects ASEAN's established architecture, it is increasingly out of step with the interlinked challenges we face today. The document's most visible structural feature is its division into four strategic pillars: political-security, economic, socio-cultural and connectivity. Yet Our Shared Future gestures only briefly towards integrated, cross-pillar responses – confined to a single, isolated bullet point on 'a green ASEAN' straddling the economic and socio-cultural pillars. Need for unified approach Entirely absent is the need for a unified approach that places health and wellbeing at the core of regional prosperity, peace, and the structural transformations essential for long-term security. Planetary health determines the wellbeing of all life in this region, yet this essential relationship is not acknowledged in the document. It outlines aspirations for coordination but offers no mechanisms to deliver it. If ASEAN is serious about addressing the systems-level threats it identifies, including climate, conflict, and displacement, it must move beyond working in silos. The economic ambitions are clear: to become the world's fourth-largest economy by 2045. There is pride in this trajectory, and rightly so. The region's dynamism is a global success story. But the blueprint's economic narrative leans heavily on traditional growth indicators – productivity, integration, scale – without enough interrogation of their sustainability or inclusiveness. Environmental concerns are addressed, but often as secondary considerations. One paragraph on the 'green economy' does not compensate for the lack of clear commitments to decarbonisation, circular economy models, or phasing out fossil fuels. Nor is there an explicit recognition of planetary boundaries. In a region already bearing the brunt of climate impacts, from sea-level rise to extreme heat and biodiversity loss, this is not just a technical omission. It is a strategic gap. Economic planning for 2045 must be built on ecological realism, not market optimism. The document rightly reaffirms ASEAN's commitment to democracy, good governance, and human rights. These are essential values for any future that seeks to be genuinely people centred. Addressing ASEAN's response But as the region continues to navigate complex political dynamics, including the ongoing crisis in Myanmar, it is striking that the vision does not address how ASEAN will respond when these values are under threat within its own community. Avoiding difficult issues may (arguably) keep the peace, but it erodes ASEAN's credibility -at home and abroad. A resilient ASEAN must live its Charter, not just cite it, and must stand for something more than branding in calm times and silence in crises. 'People-centred' is one of the most repeated phrases in the vision – welcome, and long overdue. But the document would be stronger if it showed how people's voices shaped its development or how they will be included in its implementation. There is little indication that ASEAN's citizens were consulted in any structured way in preparing this vision. Meanwhile, across Southeast Asia, people are already building the future – through climate activism, informal care networks, and digital innovation. The 4th ASEAN Youth Statement reflects this energy, explicitly calling for planetary health to bridge existing divides. But it raises a question: is this vision only the youth's, and why is it missing from the ASEAN 2045 Vision? ASEAN's political class must see people not as passive recipients of policy, but as co-creators of regional identity and progress. Without that, 'people-centred' risks becoming a slogan, not a principle. The call to strengthen the ASEAN Secretariat is, by now, a familiar one. It features in almost every major regional declaration. Yet little progress has been made in translating that sentiment into real investment or reform. Need for an institutional engine If ASEAN is to deliver on the commitments laid out in this document, it needs an institutional engine that is fit for purpose; analytically robust, politically empowered, and properly resourced by its 10 Member States. This is not about bureaucracy. It is about credibility. ASEAN 2045: Our Shared Future is an important and timely document. It articulates a vision of prosperity and cohesion and reflects a maturing regionalism that many of us who have worked across ASEAN for years welcome. But it also reflects the challenges of a multilateral system that remains cautious – sometimes excessively so – in confronting hard truths. A shared future cannot be built through declarations alone. It requires difficult conversations, courageous leadership, and deeper engagement with the people whose lives these plans will shape. It demands a willingness to shift power – not merely reassert process. If ASEAN can rise to this challenge – by investing in institutional reform, embracing ecological stewardship, and engaging its people more directly – it will not only chart a path for itself. It may offer the world a compelling model of regional cooperation fit for our turbulent times. That is a future worth striving for. And one ASEAN still has time to realise. -- BERNAMA Prof Tan Sri Dr Jemilah Mahmood, a physician and experienced crisis leader, is the Executive Director of the Sunway Centre for Planetary Health at Sunway University, Malaysia. She is the founder of MERCY Malaysia and has served in leadership roles internationally with the United Nations and Red Cross for the last decade. She was the 2019 recipient of the ASEAN prize.


Daily Express
6 days ago
- Daily Express
Cambodia Prime Minister Hun Manet heads to Malaysia for Thailand ceasefire talks
Published on: Monday, July 28, 2025 Published on: Mon, Jul 28, 2025 By: Bernama Text Size: Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim (right) shares a brief exchange with Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet before the Royal Luncheon at Istana Negara, held in conjunction with the 46th ASEAN Summit and related meetings. - BERNAMA PUTRAJAYA: Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet will arrive in Malaysia on Monday for crucial ceasefire negotiations with Thailand, facilitated by Malaysian Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim. The talks aim to de-escalate recent border clashes between the two Southeast Asian nations. Hun Manet confirmed his participation in a Facebook post late Sunday. 'I will lead a Cambodian delegation to attend a special meeting in Kuala Lumpur hosted by Malaysia. I'd like to thank Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim for his initiative and coordination to organise and host this special meeting,' he said. The meeting, scheduled for 3 pm in Putrajaya, will see Hun Manet engage with Thailand's acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai. Anwar, who also chairs ASEAN, proposed the mediation after renewed hostilities along the disputed 817-km border. Tensions flared following a May 28 skirmish near Preah Vihear, escalating into armed confrontations last week. The conflict has displaced over 80,000 civilians, with Cambodia's Ministry of National Defence reporting five soldiers and eight civilians killed. International pressure, including from the UN and US, pushed both sides toward dialogue. US President Donald Trump confirmed on Saturday that both governments agreed to discuss a President Donald Trump confirmed on Saturday that both governments agreed to discuss a ceasefire. * Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel and Telegram for breaking news alerts and key updates! * Do you have access to the Daily Express e-paper and online exclusive news? Check out subscription plans available. Stay up-to-date by following Daily Express's Telegram channel. Daily Express Malaysia


The Star
6 days ago
- The Star
Vietnam's rising role in Asean lauded by New Zealand ambassador
HANOI: As Vietnam marks 30 years of membership in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) on Monday (July 28), New Zealand's Ambassador to Vietnam Caroline Beresford praised the country's pivotal contributions to regional unity and global economic integration in a recent interview with Vietnam News Agency. Since joining Asean in 1995, Vietnam has emerged as a key player in uniting the bloc and deepening its ties with external partners, Beresford said. Its brainchild, the Asean Future Forum (AFF), has quickly become a leading strategic dialogue platform for shaping the bloc's outlook, bringing together leaders, scholars, and business and civil society representatives. The forum, she noted, exemplifies Vietnam's commitment and proactive spirit in promoting dialogue and cooperation with partners. Beresford tied Vietnam's efforts to Asean's current priorities under the Asean Community Vision 2045: 'Our Shared Future', which envisions a peaceful, stable and prosperous Indo-Pacific with Asean at its core - a goal New Zealand strongly backs. Speaking on Vietnam's role in strengthening Asean-New Zealand relations and Asean's engagement with other partners, Beresford pointed to Vietnam's considerable contributions. As Asean Chair in 2010, Vietnam hosted the second Asean-New Zealand Summit in Hannoi. A decade later, during its 2020 Asean chairmanship, Vietnam overcame the challenges of the Covid-19 pandemic to successfully hold the Asean-New Zealand Leaders' Commemorative Summit virtually marking the 45th anniversary of their dialogue relations, paving the way for the launch of negotiations to upgrade the Asean-Australia-New Zealand Free Trade Area (AANZFTA) in early 2021. She also hailed Vietnam's close coordination in the establishment of the Comprehensive Strategic Partnership between New Zealand and Asean, expected by the end of 2025, a milestone in the 50-year Asean-New Zealand relationship. Expressing commitment to deepening engagement with South-East Asia, Beresford wished to continue upholding effective cooperation with Asean in trade, economic integration, maritime security, education-training, peace initiatives and knowledge-sharing with future business leaders. She expressed particular anticipation for the upcoming Asean-New Zealand Young Business Leaders Initiative (YBLI) Summit to be held in Danang and Hue, which will bring together 120 young entrepreneurs from both sides. Congratulating Vietnam on three decades of Asean membership, the ambassador noted the country's remarkable economic progress. Since joining Asean in 1995, its GDP has ballooned 20-fold, placing it among the world's 40 largest economies, she said. With its dynamic development, status as a manufacturing hub, and network of 17 free trade agreements, including those with Asean and New Zealand, Vietnam is emerging as a key driver of global and regional economic integration. Beresford underlined the country's growing influence, particularly as it prepares to assume key regional leadership roles: Chair of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) Commission in 2026 and host of the Apec Economic Leaders' Meeting (Apec) in 2027. She expected that Vietnam would continue to play a vital role in shaping Asean's strategic directions and contributing to a peaceful, stable and prosperous Indo-Pacific. She stressed Vietnam's potential to steer the region toward digital transformation, green growth, and enhanced connectivity, building on its strengths as a young, dynamic, tech-savvy and industrious nation. New Zealand remains committed to partnering with Vietnam and Asean on this shared journey of cooperation and progress, she concluded. — Vietnam News/ANN