Following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in the US, China has emerged as a relatively stable market that looks even more attractive to Taiwan business. But experts warn about the risks of Taiwan's growing reliance on the Chinese market.
Ministry of Economic Affairs statistics show that the US and Japan absorbed 20.8 percent and 19.1 percent, respectively, of Taiwan's total exports last year, which were worth US$148.32 billion. Europe absorbed 14.8 percent, countries in ASEAN 13.3 percent, and Hong Kong 11.6 percent.
China and Hong Kong together absorbed 22.8 percent of Taiwan's overall outbound shipments last year, surpassing the US as Taiwan's largest export outlet.
Taiwan's exports to China as a ratio of its overall exports rose from 11.1 percent in 1999 to 11.2 percent last year.
The percentage climbed to 12.1 percent for the first seven months of this year, according to the ministry's statistics.
The figures show that Taiwan's export sector has become increasingly dependent on the Chinese market.
With China's imminent entry into the WTO and its successful bid to host the 2008 Olympic Games, China may in turn become a more stable market, further attracting Taiwan businesspeople to invest there.
It is expected that trade across the Taiwan Strait will grow even faster after Taiwan enters the WTO, a situation which is likely to fuel further trade with and investment in China.
The Mainland Affairs Council says that 50 percent of Taiwan's overseas investments are now directed at China.
James Chou (
As the private sector is eager to move into China, the government's trade and financial authorities should provide Taiwan businesses with sufficient and accurate information about the China market, he said.
Authorities should hammer out a detailed program on exploring the Chinese market and set up a risk-monitoring system amid growing economic exchanges between the two sides, Chou said. He warned policy makers not to dance exclusively to the tune of Taiwan's entrepreneurs.
Importers and Exporters Association of Taipei (
AI REVOLUTION: The event is to take place from Wednesday to Friday at the Taipei Nangang Exhibition Center’s halls 1 and 2 and would feature more than 1,100 exhibitors Semicon Taiwan, an annual international semiconductor exhibition, would bring leaders from the world’s top technology firms to Taipei this year, the event organizer said. The CEO Summit is to feature nine global leaders from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電), ASE Technology Holding Co (ASE, 日月光投控), Applied Materials Inc, Google, Samsung Electronics Co, SK Hynix Inc, Microsoft Corp, Interuniversity Microelectronic Centre and Marvell Technology Group Ltd, SEMI said in a news release last week. The top executives would delve into how semiconductors are positioned as the driving force behind global technological innovation amid the artificial intelligence (AI) revolution, the organizer said. Among them,
Demand for artificial intelligence (AI) chips should spur growth for the semiconductor industry over the next few years, the CEO of a major supplier to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) said, dismissing concerns that investors had misjudged the pace and extent of spending on AI. While the global chip market has grown about 8 percent annually over the past 20 years, AI semiconductors should grow at a much higher rate going forward, Scientech Corp (辛耘) chief executive officer Hsu Ming-chi (許明琪) told Bloomberg Television. “This booming of the AI industry has just begun,” Hsu said. “For the most prominent
Former Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) chairman Mark Liu (劉德音) yesterday warned against the tendency to label stakeholders as either “pro-China” or “pro-US,” calling such rigid thinking a “trap” that could impede policy discussions. Liu, an adviser to the Cabinet’s Economic Development Committee, made the comments in his keynote speech at the committee’s first advisers’ meeting. Speaking in front of Premier Cho Jung-tai (卓榮泰), National Development Council (NDC) Minister Paul Liu (劉鏡清) and other officials, Liu urged the public to be wary of falling into the “trap” of categorizing people involved in discussions into either the “pro-China” or “pro-US” camp. Liu,
Minister of Economic Affairs J.W. Kuo (郭智輝) yesterday said Taiwan’s government plans to set up a business service company in Kyushu, Japan, to help Taiwanese companies operating there. “The company will follow the one-stop service model similar to the science parks we have in Taiwan,” Kuo said. “As each prefecture is providing different conditions, we will establish a new company providing services and helping Taiwanese companies swiftly settle in Japan.” Kuo did not specify the exact location of the planned company but said it would not be in Kumamoto, the Kyushu prefecture in which Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC, 台積電) has a