The Legislative Yuan yesterday decided to review a draft cultural basic act and a proposed amendment to the Act for Industrial Innovation (產業創新條例) on Friday, when the new legislative session is scheduled to begin.
The decisions were reached during a meeting of the legislature’s Procedure Committee based on motions tendered by the Executive Yuan and lawmakers.
The draft cultural basic act states that culture — including the right to participate in cultural activities and create — is a basic right and that the nation should introduce cultural policies that promote diversity, protect the right to self-determination of different ages and ethnic groups, and facilitate international dialogue.
Photo: Lin Liang-sheng, Taipei Times
The nation should establish a public broadcasting group that creates diversified content to facilitate the freedom of expression that would be funded by a cultural development fund allocated by the Ministry of Culture, the bill says.
In addition to ensuring sufficient personnel in the public sector to implement cultural policies, the nation may (not should or must) prioritize suitable foundations or other organizations in the cultural sector when granting monetary awards, issuing subsidies, making donations or contracting projects from its cultural budget, but it should abide by the “arm’s length” principle and respect the creative direction of the parties subsidized or entrusted with a project, it says.
To facilitate industrial upgrades and transformation, the proposed amendment to the Act for Industrial Innovation seeks to establish a time frame in which income tax breaks are available to companies that purchase self-use smart machinery or integrate 5G mobile network technologies into their operations.
The draft amendment identifies smart machinery as that which applies artificial intelligence, big data, the Internet of Things, lean management, virtual-reality integration and other related technologies.
The draft amendment includes two options for the tax breaks: an annual deduction of up to 5 percent of a company’s expenses on smart machinery that is 5G-enabled, or a deduction of up to 3 percent of the amount spent each year over three consecutive years.
Companies that are eligible for the tax breaks must purchase smart machinery between Jan. 1 and Dec. 31, 2021, or integrated 5G technologies between Jan. 1 and Dec. 31, 2022, and have not recorded any contravention of labor, environmental or food safety regulations in the three years prior to the amendment’s promulgation, the draft amendment says.
Four factors led to the declaration of a typhoon day and the cancelation of classes yesterday, Taipei Mayor Chiang Wan-an (蔣萬安) said. Work and classes were canceled across Taiwan yesterday as Typhoon Krathon was forecast to make landfall in the southern part of the country. However, northern Taiwan had only heavy winds during the day and rain in the evening, leading some to criticize the cancelation. Speaking at a Taipei City Council meeting yesterday, Chiang said the decision was made due to the possibility of landslides and other problems in mountainous areas, the need to avoid a potentially dangerous commute for those
There are 77 incidents of Taiwanese travelers going missing in China between January last year and last month, the Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF) said. More than 40 remain unreachable, SEF Secretary-General Luo Wen-jia (羅文嘉) said on Friday. Most of the reachable people in the more than 30 other incidents were allegedly involved in fraud, while some had disappeared for personal reasons, Luo said. One of these people is Kuo Yu-hsuan (郭宇軒), a 22-year-old Taiwanese man from Kaohsiung who went missing while visiting China in August. China’s Taiwan Affairs Office last month said in a news statement that he was under investigation
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China is attempting to subsume Taiwanese culture under Chinese culture by promulgating legislation on preserving documents on ties between the Minnan region and Taiwan, a Taiwanese academic said yesterday. China on Tuesday enforced the Fujian Province Minnan and Taiwan Document Protection Act to counter Taiwanese cultural independence with historical evidence that would root out misleading claims, Chinese-language media outlet Straits Today reported yesterday. The act is “China’s first ad hoc local regulations in the cultural field that involve Taiwan and is a concrete step toward implementing the integrated development demonstration zone,” Fujian Provincial Archives deputy director Ma Jun-fan (馬俊凡) said. The documents