APAC Country Report Taiwan 2018

Landenrapport

  • Taiwan
  • Landbouw,
  • Automotive/Transport,
  • Chemie/Farmacie,
  • Bouw,
  • Duurzame consumptiegoederen,
  • Electronica/ICT,
  • Financiële diensten,
  • Voeding,
  • Machines/Engineering,
  • Metaal,
  • Papier,
  • Diensten,
  • Staal,
  • Textiel

13 mrt 2018

Growing competition from mainland China in the electronics sector require productivity increases and a diversification of the economy in the long-term.

APAC Taiwan 2018 Key indicators

 

APAC Taiwan 2018 Industries performances forecast

Political situation

Head of state: President Tsai Ing-wen (DPP, since May 2016)

Government type: Multiparty democratic regime headed by popular vote-elected       president.

Population: 23.6 million

Relationship with China remains the key issue in Taiwanese politics

Taiwan’s relationship with mainland China will remain the dominant political issue for the island. The political scene is polarised between pro-unification parties (KMT, PFP and New Party) and pro-independence parties, mainly the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) and the DSU.

The mainland regards Taiwan as a ‘renegade province’ and has repeatedly threatened to invade the island in the event of a formal declaration of independence. After the DPP won the January 2016 presidential and general elections, Beijing has scaled down high-level contacts with the new, more pro-independence minded government and has taken a more assertive stance in bilateral relations. However, the Taiwanese government has so far abstained from any actions that could provoke a harsh response from Beijing. 

Economic situation

Economic growth picked up in 2017 due to higher external demand

APAC Taiwan 2018 Real GDP growth

Taiwan´s economy is mainly export-oriented (focusing on electronics and computer equipment, basic metals and plastics), with the export of goods and services accounting for more than 70% of GDP, and with 40% of outbound shipments - mostly electronic devices - destined for China.

In 2017 the recovery in global trade and higher-than-expected import demand in China has boosted Taiwan´s economic growth, as exports increased 7% year-on-year. In 2018 it is expected that GDP growth will slow down somewhat due to lower external demand. However, the on-going turnaround in investments in the high-tech (electronics) sector and relatively solid labour market, underpinning consumer confidence and spending, could provide some compensation for weaker external demand.

APAC Taiwan 2018 Real exports of goods and services

Public finances are very sound, as government debt remains low at about 30% of GDP. The budget deficit is also expected to stay low, at below 1% of GDP in 2018. Taiwan’s external financial situation is very solid, with low external debt. The current account surplus is very large (more than 13% of GDP) and the country has ample foreign reserves.

Major challenges loom ahead

Currently Taiwanese electronics manufacturers still benefit from economies of scale and have managed to lower unit costs to levels often far below those of their competitors, thereby gaining a competitive advantage. Another strength of the industry is its precision and reliability.

APAC Taiwan 2018 Industrial production

However, as China’s industries increasingly climb up the technological value chain, Taiwanese electronic businesses are increasingly getting under competitive pressure. Taiwan will have to look for new high value-added alternatives in the mid- and long-term, with productivity increases and the diversification of the economy being long-term challenges. Additionally the ageing population is an issue, exacerbated by the fact that many talented young Taiwanese are moving abroad for work, including to China. Taiwan´s working age population started shrinking in 2016, and pension liabilities could become a major issue for the public budget in the future.

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