The government appeared to be at a loss yesterday when trying to explain how the president's New Year's speech would be translated into policy, with Cabinet officials offering contradictory remarks and some denying that any policies would be changed.
For example, a Cabinet spokesman yesterday denied that the government was tightening cross-strait economic policies, while the premier warned that companies wanting to invest in China would face mandatory audits in the future.
"The extent and scope of further opening-up of cross-strait economic policy hinges on whether the government has a concrete and efficient management plan, and how well it is implemented," Cabinet Spokesman Cho Jung-tai (卓榮泰) said. "There is no such a thing as tightening or relaxing cross-strait economic policy, because we can always talk about further opening-up if it is carried out well."
PHOTO: CNA
Cho made the remark in response to President Chen Shui-bian's (陳水扁) New Year address, in which Chen said that cross-strait economic policy would be changed to "active management, effective opening" to lower the risks of allowing more investment in China.
As for cross-strait schemes already in the planning process, such as charter flight services for the Lunar New Year, Cho said that they would not be affected by the new cross-strait economic policy.
Other Cabinet members were able to speak only in general terms about the issue.
Minister of Economic Affairs Ho Mei-yueh (
The biggest difference between the old strategy of "active opening, effective management" and the new policy of "active management, effective opening," Ho said, is that the government will take national interests into consideration, rather than the interests of a particular company or sector.
Premier Frank Hsieh (
During comments to the media about the president's speech, Hsieh said that one of the things the government was considering was requiring audits of companies that invested in China.
While the president's speech had been construed by some as a sign of increased political confrontation, Hsieh yesterday called on politicians to refrain from engaging in feuds.
Hsieh said that a recent opinion poll revealed that most people find politicians abhorrent, and were put in the same category as gangsters.
"The result of vicious feuding is to get oneself destroyed," he said. "Like a tragic hero, one gets destroyed like a suicide bomber."
"Political fighting is foolish and will only result in self-destruction," Hsieh said. "Some people think that everything about China is good and everything about Taiwan is bad and wrong ... My theory is that whatever has happened, is going to happen or cannot be stopped is good."
Hsieh also said he was confident that economic development for this year will be better than last year.
He called on the public to have faith in the government.
Meanwhile, Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) Chairman Joseph Wu (吳釗燮) also made comments clarifying the president's speech.
Wu yesterday blasted back at pan-blue camp legislators for their critique of President Chen Shui-bian's (
Wu made the remarks while being questioned by pan-blue camp legislators in the Legislature's Home and Nations Committee.
"According to the MAC's regular survey conducted last November, the support rate for tightening cross-strait policies was 57.8 percent, while that of relaxing cross-strait policies was just 25.5 percent. It was quite a wide gap," Wu said.
Wu said total investment made by Taiwanese enterprises in China has been shooting up over the years.
"While the official amount was US$40 billion, unofficial statistics from the Straits Exchange Foundation indicate US$150 billion," Wu said.
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