BusinessMirror

China’s war threats push Taiwan to strengthen US economic links

- By Chris Horton

It’s hard to find a world leader who’s had a better 2020 than Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen. She won reelection in January in a landslide, oversaw one of the world’s best responses to the Covid-19 pandemic and helmed an economic recovery that has boosted Taiwan’s stock exchange to record heights. The central bank last week revised up its 2020 growth target to 1.6 percent, making it an outlier among global peers as most major economies shrink.

But Tsai does have one major problem: The Communist Party is threatenin­g her life, with its Global Times newspaper saying over the weekend she would be “wiped out” in a war if she violated China’s anti- secession law.

The warning in a tweet on Saturday described her dinner with Keith Krach, the most senior US State Department official to visit Taiwan since 1979, as “playing with fire.” People’s Liberation Army aircraft last week repeatedly breached the median line between Taiwan and China, and the PLA Air Force released a video showing H- 6 bombers making a simulated strike on what looked like a US military base on the nearby island of Guam.

While China’s military dwarfs that of Taiwan, an amphibious invasion across the 100- mile- wide strait separating the two carries risks that could easily backfire on the world’s No. 2 economy. Although many observers see the US coming to Taiwan’s aid if China were to launch an attack, Tsai’s government is actively taking steps to increase economic ties between the unofficial allies to provide more incentives for American policy- makers to intervene.

“If we lessen our economic reliance on China, it won’t be able to politicall­y blackmail us,” Kolas Yotaka, presidenti­al office spokeswoma­n, told Bloomberg. “By establishi­ng closer economic ties with other countries, we’ll be able to uphold regional peace through shared prosperity.”

Right now, the economic relationsh­ip is heavily tilted toward Beijing. Exports to China accounted for 42.3 percent of Taiwan’s total in the first half of this year, with only 14.7 percent going to the US during the same period. Taiwanese investment in China in the first eight months of this year was up 50 percent year on year, totaling $3.9 billion, according to Taiwan’s economic ministry.

Tsai’s government, however, has sought to reverse those trends in particular by encouragin­g companies to bring their tech supply chains out of China to Taiwan and places like Southeast Asia. In late August, she also lifted a ban on certain US pork and beef products— the major obstacle toward a trade agreement with the US.

“We must accelerate our linkage to economies around the world, in particular strengthen­ing our ties with our most steadfast partner,” Tsai said at the time. Through July, American government data shows Taiwan as its ninth- largest trade partner, up from 11th last year.

The Krach visit marked another milestone in that effort. Tsai hosted a dinner on Friday night for him that also included Morris Chang, founder of Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co., the main chipmaker for Apple Inc. The presence of Chang, whose company recently announced it would build a $12- billion facility in Arizona, highlighte­d the importance of Taiwan’s cutting- edge semiconduc­tor industry, which the US is looking to wall off from Chinese companies such as Huawei Technologi­es Co.

On Sunday, Taiwan’s economic minister, Wang Mei-hua, announced she had met with Krach’s delegation for talks to prepare for a formal economic dialogue. Any serious discussion­s would be helmed by US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer, who negotiated the phase- one deal with China signed earlier this year.

While it’s unclear if Taiwan is on the USTR’S list of priorities, any agreement would go a long way toward bringing Taiwan out of its diplomatic isolation, according to Tiffany Ma, senior director at Bower Group Asia.

A bilateral trade agreement “would further benefit Taiwan’s security by giving momentum— and political cover— for other countries to pursue similar arrangemen­ts with Taiwan,” she said.

Worst fears

The US formally cut ties with Taiwan’s government in 1979 in order to establish relations with Beijing. Four decades later, however, US ties with China are getting worse by the day while trade and official exchanges with Taiwan are on the rise.

Shortly before Krach arrived in Taipei, Wisconsin Republican congressma­n Tom Tiffany introduced a bill to establish formal diplomatic relations with Taiwan and negotiate a free trade agreement. While the bill is unlikely to pass, the fact that a member of Congress is calling for recognitio­n of Taiwan risks adding to Beijing’s worst fears.

Despite the military saber- rattling over the weekend, China doesn’t appear ready to give up on economic engagement with Taiwan. Wang Yang, the Communist Party’s No. 4 official, on Saturday pledged to “further improve policy measures and arrangemen­ts” that benefit Taiwanese people.

“We need to have a longer- term vision,” said Liu Guoshen, director of the Taiwan Research Institute at Xiamen University, which sits across the strait.

Even so, China’s recent military maneuvers near Taiwan signal that it is watching carefully and possibly willing to escalate. While the Communist Party has never ruled Taiwan, and polls show the vast majority of Taiwanese citizens don’t want it to, President Xi Jinping has vowed to take it by force if necessary.

“Beijing fears a slippery slope,” said Bonnie Glaser, director of the China Power Project at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies. “It worries that the US has abandoned its one- China policy and won’t respect China’s red lines.”

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