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Taiwan, Singapore mull trade accord 
 
DIFFERING VIEWS: While the KMT called it a positive result of the ECFA with 
China, the DPP said most of the groundwork had been completed during the DPP 
regime 
 
By Ko Shu-ling 
STAFF REPORTER 
Friday, Aug 06, 2010, Page 1 
Taiwan and Singapore will explore the possibility of signing 
an economic cooperation agreement under the WTO framework, the Presidential 
Office said yesterday. 
 
Taiwan and Singapore made the announcement in a joint press release and 
officials will meet later this year for discussions, Presidential Office 
Spokesman Lo Chih-chiang (羅智強) said. 
 
The Taipei Representative Office in Singapore said on its Web site that Taiwan 
and Singapore had agreed to “explore the feasibility of an economic cooperation 
agreement” under the framework of the WTO and that the Executive Yuan was also 
eyeing Malaysia, the Philippines and Thailand as potential targets for trade 
pact negotiations. 
 
Lo said President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) had promised during a debate with 
Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) Chairperson Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) in April that 
he would lead a task force to push the signing of free-trade agreements (FTA) or 
economic cooperation accords with other countries after the inking of an 
Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA) with Beijing in June. 
 
The president was glad to see the task force deliver results within one month, 
Lo added. 
 
If Taiwan and Singapore ink an economic cooperation agreement, Lo said, the city 
state could serve as a bridge for Taiwan to develop closer economic ties with 
India, Japan and ASEAN. 
 
Asked why the proposed pact was called an economic cooperation agreement and not 
an FTA, Lo said trade agreements signed under the WTO framework have different 
names and not all are called FTAs. 
 
As for the name the country would use to sign the agreement, Lo said it would be 
the “Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen and Matsu (Chinese 
Taipei),” which is the name the former DPP administration used when the country 
joined the WTO in 2000. 
 
The Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) caucus yesterday lauded the development, 
saying this meant the government made the right decision in signing the ECFA. 
 
The development has “political significance” although Taiwan and Singapore is 
not Taiwan’s biggest trade partner, KMT Legislator Lai Shyh-bao (賴士葆) said. 
 
KMT Legislator Justin Chou (周守訓) said that because of the ECFA, he expected more 
countries would follow in Singapore’s footsteps and negotiate FTAs with Taiwan. 
 
The DPP, on the other hand, said it was not a surprise that Taiwan and Singapore 
were negotiating a trade deal given that most of the groundwork had been 
completed under the former DPP administration. 
 
“It’s not a breakthrough, and it’s not something to show off,” DPP spokesperson 
Lin Yu-chang (林右昌) said, adding that the KMT government should instead 
aggressively push for FTAs with larger trading partners such as the US, Japan or 
the EU. 
 
It is also cause for concern that the pact the government is negotiating with 
Singapore is based on the ECFA model, rather than a full-scale 
country-to-country FTA, he said. 
 
“The government needs to make something clear: Just what exactly is Taiwan’s 
status in negotiating these economic agreements?” he said. “We shouldn’t keep 
compromising our sovereignty.” 
 
As Singapore accounts for “less than 1 percent” of Taiwan's annual trade volume, 
Julian Kuo (郭正亮), the DPP’s ECFA response team spokesperson, said that even if 
the deal were signed, its contribution would be insignificant. 
 
Ministry of Economic Affairs figures show that Singapore accounted for 3.55 
percent of Taiwan's external trade last year, making it the nation's 
sixth-largest trading partner. 
 
The presidential spokesman said the opposition's comments were just “sour 
grapes” because the KMT government was able to accomplish what the former DPP 
administration failed to achieve. 
 
Lo said the DPP was contradicting itself by “complaining” on the one hand about 
the small trade volume with Singapore, and on the other hand “whining” that the 
KMT had taken all the credit. 
 
“I think they should straighten out their reasoning before making any comment,” 
he said. 
 
China, meanwhile, reacted carefully to the news yesterday. 
 
Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu (姜瑜) called on “relevant 
countries” to handle the issue with “caution.” 
 
China’s Taiwan Affairs Office, in a brief and characteristically opaque 
statement carried by Xinhua news agency, said: “We believe Singapore will 
continue to stick to the one China policy, and thus properly handle economic and 
trade relations with Taiwan.” 
 
Taiwan currently has free-trade deals only with diplomatic allies Panama, 
Guatemala and Nicaragua. It has been pushing for ties with major markets, but 
talks have been bogged down mainly due to pressure from Beijing. 
 
ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY FLORA WANG, VINCENT Y. CHAO AND 
AGENCIES 
  
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