- Michael Tai
says Taiwan’s economy is now inextricably linked to China, and the
Taiwanese people appear unwilling to pay a high price for independence
- In economic
terms, China does not need Taiwan in the same way that Taiwan needs China,
and Beijing can afford to play a waiting game
The Kuomintang’s
(KMT) landslide victory over the Democratic Progressive Party
(DPP) in local elections marked a dramatic reversal of the 2016 presidential election, when DPP candidate Tsai Ing-wen
won by a huge margin over her KMT opponent Eric Chu. Seen as a referendum on
Tsai’s policies, the recent elections were fought over bread and butter issues even though many of the woes are due
to globalising forces that no government can hold back.
Voters punished
the DPP for a lacklustre economy linked to tensions with the mainland barely two years after they
rejected KMT president Ma Ying-jeou’s China-friendly policies. The fickle swings put the spotlight
once again on cross-strait relations. Taipei should come to terms with Beijing
for two fundamental reasons.
Firstly, the
island’s fortunes are closely linked to those of the mainland. Taiwanese
businesses attracted by common language, low land and labour costs, and a vast
market, started investing in China from the 1990s. Some 70 per cent of
Taiwanese outbound foreign direct investment goes to the mainland, and one to
two million Taiwanese businessmen and their families live in China, even as
Beijing offers further incentives to lure more over.
China accounts
for over 40 per cent of Taiwan’s exports, of which 80 per cent are intermediary
goods that are assembled in China before being sold domestically or exported.
In order to diversify away from the mainland, President Tsai Ing-wen
promulgated the New Southbound Policy in 2016 to boost trade and investment
ties with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, but relocating
manufacturing to Southeast Asia is easier said than done.
As it has no
diplomatic ties with Asean states, Taipei is unable to secure free-trade
agreements with them, which means Taiwanese components are subject to sometimes
hefty tariffs by the bloc. Taiwan’s most important preferential trade pact
remains the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement signed with the mainland
in 2010.
But even more problematic
is the fact that Southeast Asia simply cannot match Chinese manufacturing
prowess. China boasts a comprehensive supply chain able to turn blueprints into
prototypes often in a matter of days. Ninety per cent of the world's
electronics are made at least in part in Shenzhen and, despite rising wages, it
is still more efficient to manufacture in China, according to Masami Miyashita
of the Japanese External Trade Organisation.
Secondly, the
Taiwanese are not prepared to pay a stiff price for de jure independence.
Measured in purchasing power parity (PPP), Taiwan is the 19th richest country
in the world, while its GDP per capita of US$52,304 is higher than that of
Canada, France, Italy, Japan or the UK. Crime is low and according to the 2017
Crime Index, Taipei is the third-safest city in the world after Abu Dhabi and
Munich (Singapore ranks eighth; Tokyo 16th). Raised in prosperity, the current
generation of Taiwanese are less hardy than their parents, the force behind the
Taiwan miracle of the 1970s and 1980s.
A recent survey
showed that 88 per cent of Taiwanese office and factory employees are
interested in working overseas, including on the mainland. Meanwhile, the
country is facing difficulty recruiting soldiers. With a history of repressive
martial law rule, the military is deeply unpopular, and plans to recruit 80 per
cent of its manpower needs by the end of 2018 are unlikely to be realised.
Taiwanese society enjoys a high degree of personal freedom and autonomy, and young
people value personal freedom over a sense of national duty.
Young people
believe that China could crush Taiwan with economic power alone and going to
war would be a waste of time and money. Neither is the business community
prepared to bear financial pain for the sake of independence. Since Tsai came
to power, business has suffered as Beijing curbed agricultural imports from
Taiwan and slowed the flow of tourists to the island. In the recent elections,
the business sector signalled that profits matter.
Taiwan is a
vibrant democracy with a broad range of civil liberties. In the 2018 World Press Freedom
survey, it ranked 42nd, three notches above the United States, and its
reluctance to be governed by Beijing is understandable. However, China is in no
hurry to bring the island under its rule as long as Taipei abides by the 1992
Consensus or “one-China” policy
Consensus or ‘one-China’ policy
The mainland has
more pressing matters to deal with, such as environmental degradation, food
safety, growing income disparity and corruption, while contending with outside forces seeking to constraint its development.
In economic
terms, China does not need Taiwan in the way that Taiwan needs China. The
one-China policy, whereby both sides agree that there is only one China but
each hold a different opinion as to the meaning of “one China”, offers enough
diplomatic ambiguity to maintain the status quo. Tsai refuses to acknowledge the
formula and diehard independence advocates in her party are banking on American
and Japanese protection if push comes to shove. But that may be wishful
thinking as each state ultimately acts in its own best interests.
Beyond verbal
support, Washington has no real desire to be sucked into a war in the Taiwan
Strait. Meanwhile, thanks to US President Donald Trump and his rejection of
global free trade, Tokyo and Beijing are finding common ground. Relations have warmed and during Japanese
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s three-day visit to China in October, for the first
formal Sino-Japanese summit in seven years, he was feted at two state dinners
by Premier Li Keqiang and President Xi Jinping, an unprecedented honour for a
foreign dignitary. Abe brought along a 500-strong business delegation, his
biggest to date, and signed agreements to cooperate on infrastructure projects
in third countries and arranged a US$29 billion currency swap with potentially fateful
consequences for the dollar in the long run. Taipei would be well advised to
take note.
Dr Michael Tai is a visiting scholar
at the National Taiwan University's Graduate Institute of National Development
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