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Sun, Jul 01, 2001 - Page 3 News List

Newsmaker-2: New CDIB chief is Lee's inside man

Viewed by some as a successful keeper of the KMT coffers and by others as a selfish opportunist, teh CDIB's Liu Tai-ying is former president Lee's money man and a key defender of his legacy, in large measure bankrolling the former president's newest political plans

By Joyce Huang  /  STAFF REPORTER

Liu Tai-ying

PHOTO:CHI PEI-HSIUNG, TAIPEI TIMES

An indicator of retired president Lee Teng-hui's (李登輝) remaining political strength, Liu Tai-ying's (劉泰英) recent landslide re-election victory as the China Development Industrial Bank's (CDIB, 中華開發銀行) chairman further guarantees Lee an essential source of financial support in preparation for his impending political comeback.

"Liu has successfully seized control over the bank, the KMT's crown jewel. The bank has a market capitalization of NT$200 billion, is essential to all KMT-run enterprises and under Liu has now been privatized out of the party's control," former president of Wealth Magazine (財訊), Hsieh Chin-ho (謝金河) said, adding that the once wealthiest party in the world was likely to be burdened with as yet undiscovered debts due to the changes instituted by Liu.

Throughout the fracas during the bank's reshuffle, Liu demonstrated his capacity for political maneuvering, thoroughly uprooting his apparent rival Benny Hu (胡定吾) and the forces within the bank that had supported him, even after Hu had pledged his loyalty to President Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁) and the ruling DPP.

"Liu is not only an economic animal, but also a political animal," political commentator Hu Chung-hsin (胡忠信) said, adding that Liu, thereafter, would serve as a "power broker" to the pro-Lee alliance with Chen, who is seen as a weak president in desperate need of Lee's support.

Hu Chung-hsin, however, described Liu as a fox borrowing the tiger's awe (狐假虎威) since most of Liu's authority came from Lee.

A sober-minded economist, the 65-year-old Liu has known Lee for almost 40 years since Lee taught Liu economics at National Taiwan University. Both later pursued PhDs at Cornell University and became very close friends who often exchanged views on Taiwan's political and economic affairs.

While he was president of the Taiwan Institute of Economic Research (台經院), Liu was recruited in 1993 by Lee, who had assumed the presidency five years before, to head the KMT's Investment and Business Management Committee (投管會) and helped further consolidate Lee's political regime.

"During his eight-year tenure [as head of the committee], he managed to triple the party's capital assets and quadruple its business investments," former committee board member Darby Liu (劉大貝) said, adding that the treasurer also made a great contribution to reforming party-owned enterprises.

Because of Liu's stern loyalty and capacity for making a profit for the party, Lee entrusted various important political positions to him.

"Liu made a lot of money for the party," Lee once told a close friend, who asked Lee why Liu, an opportunist in his eyes, was tapped to be his right hand man.

Expressing a different view, others complain that Liu put more effort into building his own business connections than into expanding the party's businesses while serving as as party treasurer.

"He took advantage of the KMT's resources to secure and expand his own political and economic connections," Hsieh said, citing party-backed loans to the then-nearly bankrupt Core Pacific Group (威京集團), chaired by Sheen Ching-jing (沈慶京), and other troubled businesses such as the Top Group (尖美集團) and the Tuntex Group (東帝士集團).

"It has been much-rumored that some of the party's past overseas investments [decided by Liu] lost lots of money," said a media insider, who requested anonymity, adding that Liu tended to spend the party's capital extravagantly.

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