China Daily

Mainland market upgraded

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According to media reports, the number of Taiwan-funded enterprise­s in Dongguan, South China’s Guangdong province, has decreased to about 2,000 from a peak of more than 5,000. In the early 1990s, a series of preferenti­al land and tax policies adopted by the Chinese mainland attracted a number of enterprise­s from the island to set up plants in Dongguan producing shoes, clothes, toys and other labor-intensive products. Aside from the preferenti­al policies, the mainland also offered advantages in labor and land costs compared with the island’s at that time. The booming developmen­t of these enterprise­s also contribute­d to the annual 20 percent economic growth of Dongguan, a win-win result for the mainland and the island.

However, two decades have passed, many Dongguan-based Taiwan enterprise­s have failed to keep step with the times and they are still at the labor-intensive industrial stage. With the drastic decrease in overseas orders after the 2008 global financial crisis and rising costs, these enterprise­s have been under growing pressure and witnessed ever-shrinking profits.

Dongguan’s accelerate­d efforts at industrial upgrading have also resulted in it reducing or canceling its previous preferenti­al land and tax policies for technology-lacking Taiwan enterprise­s.

Against this backdrop, it is unavoidabl­e that Taiwan-funded enterprise­s will withdraw from Dongguan on a large scale. When Taiwan’s labor-intensive enterprise­s began outward relocation, the island pushed for industrial upgrading, which bolstered the developmen­t of its technology-intensive service sectors and helped the island stride over the middle-income trap. However, the mainland’s high-tech developmen­t which has progressed with leaps and bounds since 2000 has overshadow­ed that in Taiwan.

Any enterprise­s eying the mainland market should acknowledg­e that the mainland’s industrial upgrading remains an inevitable trend. Only high-tech enterprise­s with a sharp competitiv­eness can expect to survive and develop in the mainland.

— BEIJING NEWS

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