As the committee will know, Canada is presently at the negotiating table with the ASEAN bloc of 10 countries. Some of those countries are already a part of the CPTPP. We are also at the negotiating table with Indonesia on a bilateral agreement.
To give people the sense of scale of the opportunity, Indonesia is a country of 280 million people. Next to the United States, they are number two. The only two other countries larger than that are India and China, so it will be and is an important trading relationship. As you pointed out, we already have 70 years of diplomatic relations with Indonesia, and with the countries of the ASEAN, they are projected to be the third-largest bloc in the world. It is fast-growing, and we already have tremendous Canadian presence there.
In each of these trips that I do, I have an opportunity to meet with women-owned businesses and the Canadian companies that are operating on the ground so that they can talk to me about the kind of growth they are seeing in what they say to me are frontier markets. That's real market access for both services and goods, and that is really very important. We are going to be celebrating an anniversary of 45 years in the ASEAN-Canada relationship, so both of these trading agreements on both tracks are extremely important.
What are trade agreements important for? They are important so that we are able to create the right conditions through those agreements for businesses to do business and for investors to have confidence because there is a set of predictable rules that they can look to in order to make Canadian investments grow into the region or make those very investments grow into Canada.
I was very pleased, while I was in the region, to launch a Canada trade gateway to the Indo-Pacific, to the Asia-Pacific. We have a tremendous group of trade commissioners and human capital in the region, but this really will help us coordinate in a way that allows Canadian companies one window or one door.
I've been telling people in the region that the door swings both ways. It's a way for Canadian companies to understand the opportunities in the region and to create those supports, whether they are from the Canadian trade accelerators, tech accelerators, the Canadian trade commissioner service or the range of Canadian chambers that are now all over the region to support and to work together with Canadian businesses and exporters who are looking to grow in that region. It is very dynamic. I know that as part of its work, the committee has some plans to take a look at it on the ground, and I think you will see what I see, which is this dynamic growth.
I'm someone who is very committed to inclusive trade that works for everyone and to making sure that every business, no matter what size, gets a foothold in those economies and gets into those countries. Growth means jobs for Canadians, and good jobs for Canadians are good for our communities.