ASEAN has finalized the Digital Economy Framework Agreement (DEFA), set for signing in November 2025. It aims to create a unified digital market potentially worth US$2 trillion by 2030, reducing regulatory fragmentation and strengthening ASEAN’s global digital competitiveness.
Key Points
• ASEAN’s Digital Economy Framework Agreement (DEFA) has been officially drafted following meetings in Manila, with member states set to sign it in November 2025 alongside the 49th ASEAN Summit, aiming to create a unified, rules-based digital market projected to reach US$2 trillion by 2030.
• DEFA seeks to harmonize digital trade regulations, reduce compliance costs for MSMEs, attract foreign investment, and eliminate fragmented national regulations, positioning ASEAN as a global digital hub serving 700 million people across its fifth-largest global economy.
• Beyond regional integration, DEFA serves as a geostrategic tool advancing ASEAN 2045 goals, giving the bloc a stronger collective voice in global digital trade governance while shifting the region from crisis-driven responses toward long-term structural planning amid ongoing economic and geopolitical disruptions.
ASEAN’s DEFA: A Landmark Digital Agreement Takes Shape
The ASEAN Digital Economy Framework Agreement (DEFA) has been officially drafted following senior economic officials’ meetings in Manila from May 27 to 29. The final agreement resolved all outstanding issues after a ministerial push at the 27th AEC Council Meeting in Cebu. Member states are scheduled to formally sign DEFA in November 2025, alongside the 49th ASEAN Summit. Framed as ASEAN’s strategic response to a rapidly evolving digital landscape, DEFA represents a commitment to building an open, seamlessly connected, and rules-based digital future, transitioning the region from fragmented, ad hoc initiatives to a unified, rules-based digital market.
Unlocking a US$2 Trillion Digital Economy
DEFA’s implementation is projected to accelerate the region’s digital economy to US$2 trillion by 2030, strengthening ASEAN’s position as a global digital hub. Deputy Secretary-General Satvinder Singh highlighted that harmonised standards for digital trade, e-commerce, and data would significantly cut costs and reduce regulatory fragmentation. By streamlining digital regulations, DEFA would make the region more attractive for both foreign and domestic investment. Critically, eliminating conflicting national regulations would reduce heavy compliance burdens on MSMEs, enabling smaller businesses to participate more freely and competitively in the regional digital marketplace.
DEFA as a Geostrategic Tool for ASEAN 2045
Beyond trade, DEFA is positioned as both a regional integration mechanism and a geostrategic instrument, giving ASEAN a stronger collective voice in global digital governance debates, including customs duties on electronic transmissions. Singh emphasised that ASEAN’s scale — 700 million people and the world’s fifth-largest economy — makes it a stabilising force amid global disruption. Despite trade tensions and challenging investment conditions, major ASEAN economies recorded GDP growth of approximately 4.9% and trade expansion exceeding 8%. DEFA ultimately supports ASEAN’s long-term structural planning strategy, moving the region away from crisis-driven management toward sustainable, future-ready digital integration aligned with ASEAN 2045 goals.
Source : ASEAN member states come to agreement on DEFA

