China Daily

Tsai’s costly plan is against the will of people

- Wang Jianmin The author is a researcher at the Institute of Taiwan Studies, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

Early this month, Taiwan lawmakers approved an infrastruc­ture stimulus plan designed to boost demand and thus the island’s economy. The “proactive” stimulus plan, which the Tsai Ing-wen administra­tion had said in March would involve 880 billion New Taiwan dollars ($29 billion) and be spread over eight years, ended up with only half the originally planned investment and duration.

The compromise was made after lawmakers from both the ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party and opposition parties such as Kuomintang criticized the original version as backdoor dealing and poor planning. The project could be extended after four years through legislativ­e approval.

Despite concession­s, even some DPP politician­s questioned the decision-making process and prospects of the four-year plan. Taipei Mayor Ko Wen-je has dismissed the plan as a waste of money, while some senior economists say they fail to see anything “proactive” or financiall­y feasible in the plan, which explains why Tsai had to reduce its investment and duration to half.

Proposed just six months ago and altered several times on unheralded requests, Tsai’s “grand” plan has come into effect without soliciting enough public opinions. Worse, the distributi­on of resources is apparently in favor of the regions that support the DPP, fueling concerns that the plan is aimed at rewarding die-hard DPP supporters.

And although the plan is designed to target railways, water resources, green energy and the digital economy, it suffers from a lack of foresight. Projects such as improving streetscap­es, managing vehicle parking and fixing sewer systems have been put on the list of major constructi­on projects, and Tsai has sought to invest more than 400 billion NT dollars in railway constructi­on, which has a meager 6.4 percent support rate according to a June survey.

No wonder people are questionin­g why Tsai is proceeding with the costly infrastruc­ture plan against the will of many people and politician­s.

As a DPP politician, Tsai often questioned the cross-Straits agreements on goods and service trade endorsed by her predecesso­r Ma Ying-jeou, and said they were a result of behind-the-scene negotiatio­ns. The “proactive” plan she has muscled through the legislatur­e after assuming office in May, however, shows her double standard policy.

There is enough reason to question whether the humongous infrastruc­ture plan will work, because, among other things, it will not be funded by government funds but by borrowing debts. Over-indebtedne­ss may not only cause delays in constructi­on and lead to a waste of resources, but also impose extra burden on the next administra­tion. The ambitious plan risks going down the drain should Tsai fail to heed lessons from the aborted major infrastruc­ture projects over the past two decades.

... even some DPP politician­s questioned the decision-making process and prospects of the four-year plan.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong