Taiwan is expected to maintain its leading role as a high-tech provider while the rise of emerging economies reshape the world's economic map, analysts said yesterday.
"Taiwan is an economy that would be well-positioned as high-tech provider in the global economy," Yuwa Hedrick Wong (王月魂), a Singapore-based economist of MasterCard International, said on the sidelines of a forum on the emerging economies of so-called BRIC countries -- Brazil, Russia, India and China -- held by the Taipei-based Business Weekly yesterday.
Amid the changes in the global economy, Taiwan should promote a knowledge-driven industry by improving manpower skills and upgrading research institutions to world-class levels to take advantage of upcoming opportunities, he said.
"After all, Taiwan is not the only high-tech provider in the global economy," Wong said.
After Goldman Sachs released a report titled "Dreaming with BRICs: The Path to 2050" in October 2003, the magazine has been running a series of features on the BRIC countries that has sparked considerable discussion in Taiwan.
The combined GDP of the four developing countries is expected to soar to more than US$40 trillion by 2040, overtaking the G6 (the US, Japan, the UK, Germany, France and Italy), the Goldman Sachs report predicted on the basis of assumptions of stable macro-economic environments and ideal policy quality.
The rise of the emerging economies could reshuffle the relative economic contributions of countries around the globe during the next 45 years, according to the report.
China is expected to overtake the US as the world's largest economy, up from sixth place last year, with GDP of US$44.45 trillion in 2050, the report said.
Meanwhile, India is expected to climb to third place, from last year's 11th place, with GDP of US$27.8 trillion by 2050. Brazil is predicted to be in fifth place, up from 13th, with GDP of US$6.07 trillion, while Russia would be ranked sixth, up from 16th place, with GDP of US$5.87 trillion in 2050, according to the report.
Of the G6 countries, only the US and Japan are expected to stay in the top six, it said.
Taiwan should seize the opportunity offered by the global economic shakeup and leverage the skilled manpower in China, India and Russia, as well as the improving consumption capabilities of their mass markets, said David Lin (林行憲), chief executive officer of Lite-On Group (光寶集團), who participated as one of the panelists yesterday.
Nonetheless, while the nation could profit from the BRIC countries' emergence, it may just as well experience the opposite effect.
Increasing demand in these developing countries, fuelled by their economic take-off, could drive up consumer prices, Wong said.
As a commodity importer, Taiwan could be faced with significantly higher production costs in the coming years, he warned.
PERSISTENT RUMORS: Nvidia’s CEO said the firm is not in talks to sell AI chips to China, but he would welcome a change in US policy barring the activity Nvidia Corp CEO Jensen Huang (黃仁勳) said his company is not in discussions to sell its Blackwell artificial intelligence (AI) chips to Chinese firms, waving off speculation it is trying to engineer a return to the world’s largest semiconductor market. Huang, who arrived in Taiwan yesterday ahead of meetings with longtime partner Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電), took the opportunity to clarify recent comments about the US-China AI race. The Nvidia head caused a stir in an interview this week with the Financial Times, in which he was quoted as saying “China will win” the AI race. Huang yesterday said
Japanese technology giant Softbank Group Corp said Tuesday it has sold its stake in Nvidia Corp, raising US$5.8 billion to pour into other investments. It also reported its profit nearly tripled in the first half of this fiscal year from a year earlier. Tokyo-based Softbank said it sold the stake in Silicon Vally-based Nvidia last month, a move that reflects its shift in focus to OpenAI, owner of the artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot ChatGPT. Softbank reported its profit in the April-to-September period soared to about 2.5 trillion yen (about US$13 billion). Its sales for the six month period rose 7.7 percent year-on-year
MORE WEIGHT: The national weighting was raised in one index while holding steady in two others, while several companies rose or fell in prominence MSCI Inc, a global index provider, has raised Taiwan’s weighting in one of its major indices and left the country’s weighting unchanged in two other indices after a regular index review. In a statement released on Thursday, MSCI said it has upgraded Taiwan’s weighting in the MSCI All-Country World Index by 0.02 percentage points to 2.25 percent, while maintaining the weighting in the MSCI Emerging Markets Index, the most closely watched by foreign institutional investors, at 20.46 percent. Additionally, the index provider has left Taiwan’s weighting in the MSCI All-Country Asia ex-Japan Index unchanged at 23.15 percent. The latest index adjustments are to
CRESTING WAVE: Companies are still buying in, but the shivers in the market could be the first signs that the AI wave has peaked and the collapse is upon the world Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) yesterday reported a new monthly record of NT$367.47 billion (US$11.85 billion) in consolidated sales for last month thanks to global demand for artificial intelligence (AI) applications. Last month’s figure represented 16.9 percent annual growth, the slowest pace since February last year. On a monthly basis, sales rose 11 percent. Cumulative sales in the first 10 months of the year grew 33.8 percent year-on-year to NT$3.13 trillion, a record for the same period in the company’s history. However, the slowing growth in monthly sales last month highlights uncertainty over the sustainability of the AI boom even as