Sun, Dec 23, 2001 - Page 1 News List

Backers of A-bian create think tank

BRAIN TRUST Though the Taiwan Think Tank will not be officially formed until the end of the month, some of its forums have already had a hand in national policy

By Lin Chieh-yu  /  STAFF REPORTER

A new think tank made up of political, economic and academic heavyweights will be formed by the end of the month and is expected to be an important brain trust for President Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁).

The group, the Taiwan Think Tank (台灣智庫), will be headed by chairman of the Taiwan Stock Exchange Lin Jong-hsiung (林鐘雄) and will include several pro-Chen entrepreneurs and political figures. The think tank will hold its official founding ceremony on Dec. 30.

"The purpose of the think tank is to help create consensus between the government and other circles," said former secretary-general to the premier Wea Chi-lin (魏啟林), now chairman of the Land Bank of Taiwan. The group is privately funded, Wea added.

In addition to Lin, another well-known scholar joining the group is Ko Chen-en (柯承恩), dean of National Taiwan University's College of Management. Political heavyweights Commissioner of the National Security Council Lin Chia-lung (林佳龍), Minister-without-portfolio Hsu Chih-hsiung (許志雄) and Director-General of the Hsinchu Science-based Industrial Park Administration James Lee (李界木) have all signed on.

Cathay Life Chairman Tsai Hong-tu (蔡宏圖) and Vice President of I-mei Foods Industrial Co Ltd Kao Chih-shang (高志尚) are among the business leaders slated to participate.

Wea said that over the past year, members of the new think tank have already provided the government with many policy-making suggestions through a number of forums and seminars.

"[But] this think tank is definitely not a `salute to power,'" Wea said. "We expect it to be a platform on which those with knowledge and those who have the power to form policy can exchange dialogue and on which intellectuals and policy-makers can interact with each other on an equal footing," Wea said.

"We aspire to become the driving force behind political, economic and social policies," he said.

A government official who will be a member of the new group said that eight forums within the think tank are already up and running and that some of them have actually been in operation for nearly a year.

The member said that they include forums that tackle issues related to the Economic Development Advisory Conference, government and financial reform and responses to Taiwan's WTO entry.

Wea confirmed the comments and said that "some concrete ideas put forth by these forums have already been adopted by the government."

The think-tank member said that the group will try to use its talent to help the Chen administration.

"The DPP has long been thought of as not having enough policy-making experience or enough talented people that are up to the job.

"Now people from business, academia and political circles who are friendly to Chen Shui-bian are putting their money and resources together to extensively recruit like-minded intellectuals to finally form the Taiwan Think Tank," the member said.

The member said the think tank is comprised of three groups of talent. The first, such as Lin Chung-hsiung, is from academia. The second includes aides from Chen's national security system and people hailing from the anti-KMT student-movement generation of the 1980s. The third consists of government officials and business leaders.

Several political, academic and business heavyweights have agreed to act as consultants to the new group.

Among them are Academia Sinica President Lee Yuan-tseh (李遠哲), National Chi Nan University Professor of Public Policy and Administration Byron Weng (翁松燃), former DPP chairman Lin I-hsiung (林義雄), Secretary-General of the Presidential Office Yu Shyi-kun and Chairman of the Council for Economic Planning and Development Chen Po-chih (陳博志).

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