The last installment of Cabinet appointments was finally announced yesterday, with Lee Yung-san (李庸三) taking over the Ministry of Finance and Christine Tsung (
Led by people from the business sector ,the financial and economic agencies can break free from both the traditional bureaucratic style of career officialdom and the constraints of the academics' ivory tower. Their pragmatism and practical experience might create a new milieu. We are willing to harbor cautious but optimistic expectations of the new "economic" Cabinet.
Economic affairs minister-designate Christine Tsung, for example, has led China Airlines (
Bethune received kudos in international airlines circles for his book From Worst to First, published in 1998. However the air-transport business was hit hard last year by the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, and Continental Airlines was in crisis once again. Tsung experienced similar problems, but she still managed to make CAL turn a profit. In this respect, she is even more qualified than Bethune to write a book with such a title.
Tsung's example tells us that one must use extraordinary measures to salvage a debt-ridden, wobbling old company. The DPP government has inherited the mess left behind by the previous KMT government, including an incompetent bureaucracy and a do-nothing government culture. On top of that are the international economic decline and the inexperience of the new government officials. Such complex factors have caused the DPP government to fall far short of people's expectations in salvaging the economy.
To work on the economy under these difficult circumstances, one naturally must employ new personnel with ability and also push for extraordinary measures. In fact, there is no great difference between governing a country and running a company. What we need now is a team of managers who can run Taiwan Inc.
External rather than domestic factors have been behind Taiwan's economic decline over the past 20 months. It is irresponsible for the opposition parties to lay all the blame on the DPP. Taiwan's economic doldrums are also different from the "balance-sheet recession" that Japan has experienced over the past decade. Problems such as bad loans are less serious in Taiwan's financial system than they are in Japan's.
Once the international economic situation improves, Taiwan's resilient small and medium-sized companies will have a chance to make a comeback. With the new Cabinet team taking the lead, creating new business opportunities and coordinating their policies with industry, an economic recovery is not impossible in Taiwan over the next two years.
However, companies seek profit through business efficiency -- a point that is different from running a government. Apart from pursuing short-term interests, a country also needs to lay the foundations for long-term and sustainable development.
Therefore, apart from subtlety and creativity, Taiwan also needs innovation and foresight to lay down sustainable objectives and policies.
We hope the new financial and economic team will not only work for the short-term goal of economic recovery, but also build the foundations for a second Taiwanese economic miracle. Only then can Chen Shui-bian's (
A recent report concerning a student who is suing his teacher posed the question in its headline: Does failing a student in two subjects constitute bullying? The college student in Chiayi County apparently sought NT$2 million (US$63,603) in state compensation, but a court dismissed the case. The first reaction of many might have been to ask: What has happened to students nowadays? Some say that teachers have lost their authority, while others say students are overindulged. Some even start reminiscing over the days when “whatever the teacher says goes.” However, the real issue might be overlooked if emotional reactions like that are the
When I visited Taiwan last summer, I called on the nation to use its status as a technology superpower to build superweapons. It is obvious to me as I return a year later that Taiwan is now answering that call. By 2030, Taiwan envisions a domestic drone hub, capable of producing large quantities of drones per year. The nation continues to tighten cooperation across the private sector, scientific researchers and the elected government, on creating new and innovative production avenues for defense, while efforts to become central to the “democratic supply chain” are only increasing. Anduril is seeing all of these positive
Singaporean former Prime Minister and current senior minister Lee Hsien- Loong(李顯龍) last month stood on Chinese soil and told Beijing that Singapore cooperates because of “shared interests”, not because of common “ethnic descent,” a significant statement that has upended China’s cognitive warfare tactics of “ethnic nationalism.” Along with using its military buildup and economic growth to expand its international dominance, China has long deployed ethnic politics to promote the idea that all ethnic Chinese around the world, regardless of citizenship, share a tight bond with the Chinese motherland, by which it means the regime of the People’s Republic of China (PRC)
Taiwan’s economic momentum, driven by demand for artificial intelligence (AI) products, remains strong, with booming demand for advanced semiconductors, servers and key components. In the first quarter, GDP expanded 14.55 percent year-on-year, the second consecutive quarter of double-digit percentage growth and accelerating from the 12.95 percent expansion in the previous quarter, the Directorate-General of Budget, Accounting and Statistics (DGBAS) reported on Friday. Net exports remained the dominant driver of growth, contributing 10.33 percentage points to Taiwan’s GDP growth in the first quarter. That came as exports rose 35.76 percent year-on-year in the first quarter, outpacing 26.34 percent growth in imports, the