Nation¡¦s share of
Chinese market continues to fall
NO PANACEA: Taiwan has not seen the benefits
extolled by proponents of the ECFA, with zero new free-trade agreements, and
foreign investment at home still falling
By Vincent Y. Chao / Staff Reporter
Taiwan¡¦s share of the Chinese market continued to fall last year, despite
increasing bilateral trade, calling into question the effectiveness of the
cross-strait Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA), local researchers
said yesterday.
While about 40 percent of Taiwanese exports continue to flow to China, that
number represented a significant drop from last year and comes amid sharply
slowing growth in that category ¡X a trend not seen with Taiwan¡¦s other major
trading partners.
Researchers studying the ECFA, signed in June last year, said the controversial
trade deal had in most cases failed to deliver many of its envisioned benefits
for Taiwan¡¦s struggling manufacturing industry.
¡§The ECFA was seen as helping Taiwan engage in free-trade agreements with other
countries and increase the competitiveness of exports to China, creating
investment at home and attracting foreign funding,¡¨ Tung Chen-yuan (µ£®¶·½), a
professor at National Chengchi University, told a discussion hosted by the
thinktank Taiwan Brain Trust, which is generally perceived to be more
sympathetic to the pan-green camp. ¡§But almost a year after it was signed, the
initial achievements are fewer than expected.¡¨
Ministry of Finance trade data shows Taiwan¡¦s exports to China grew at 14.3
percent quarter-on-quarter in the first three months of this year, significantly
lower than the 75.6 percent growth in the same quarter last year. While Taiwan
saw a major rebound in exports following the global financial crisis, the growth
was seen in exports to the US and Europe, not to Japan and China.
In fact, Taiwan¡¦s share of the Chinese market fell to 7.4 percent in the first
quarter of this year from 8.4 percent in the same period last year, continuing a
five-year trend, CEIC China Database statistics showed.
¡§The ECFA¡¦s early harvest list has been in effect since the start of the first
quarter of 2011, but [Taiwan¡¦s] market share in China still fell to 7.4 percent,
the lowest point since 1993. It shows the ECFA hasn¡¦t really changed the fact
that Taiwan is losing competitiveness in the Chinese market,¡¨ Tung said,
referring to a list of initial tariff reductions.
Figures on foreign investments also suggest that President Ma Ying-jeou¡¦s (°¨^¤E)
administration was ¡§perhaps too optimistic in its ECFA predictions,¡¨ Tung said,
and added there isn¡¦t ¡§any indication that it could pick up.¡¨
Foreign investment in Taiwan has decreased for three straight years, dropping
from a recent high of NT$15.4 billion (US$545.4 million) in 2007 to NT$3.8
billion last year, according to data from the Ministry of Economic Affairs.
Taiwan attracted NT$1 billion in the first quarter this year, a 34.4 percent
quarter-on-quarter decrease.
Similarly, capital outflows have continued to outpace inflows over the past two
years, reversing gains made during a sudden spike in 2008, according to Tung,
citing central bank figures.
Since the ECFA was signed in the second quarter of last year, US$32.8 billion
more in outflows than inflows have left Taiwan. In the third quarter of last
year, outflows outpaced inflows by US$12.9 billion, while falling to US$3.3
billion in the final three months. However, that number rose again to US$16.6
billion in the first three months of this year, after the early harvest list
came into force.
¡§The ECFA didn¡¦t have the immediate effect of attracting more foreign investment
to Taiwan, according to the numbers,¡¨ Tung said. ¡§The export of large amounts of
capital brings with it a brain drain that also reduces the -competitiveness of
Taiwan¡¦s internal market, damaging economic growth.¡¨
Despite the disappointing figures, the government continues to promote the
agreement, other participants in the discussion said.
Former Mainland Affairs Council chairman Joseph Wu (§d°xÀè) said not enough
attention has been paid to China¡¦s political motives and whether the
arrangements with China infringed on Taiwan¡¦s sovereignty.
Lai I-chung (¿à©É©¾), a researcher at Taiwan Thinktank, called the government
¡§reckless¡¨ for signing agreements with Beijing on a one-by-one basis, ¡§without a
comprehensive plan.¡¨
Lai added there were also questions about the legality of the process, with
cross-strait negotiations conducted by the non-profit Straits Exchange
Foundation (SEF) and China¡¦s Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Strait.
The discussion was held one day after the American Chamber of Commerce in Taipei
advised Taiwan to look beyond exporting to China.
However, on Tuesday, SEF officials praised ¡§warming cross-strait ties,¡¨
including the ECFA, for helping contribute to Taiwan¡¦s 10.89 percent economic
growth last year.
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