The Business Times

Taiwan economy grows at fastest pace since 2021 on chip boom

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TAIWAN’S economy expanded at the fastest pace in almost three years as global demand for artificial intelligen­ce-related technologi­es fuelled a boom in exports.

Gross domestic product grew 6.51 per cent year on year to NT$5.46 trillion (S$230 billion) in the first quarter, according to a statement from the statistics bureau in Taipei on Tuesday (Apr 30), the fastest pace since the second quarter of 2021. That was stronger than the 6 per cent increase economists had forecast in a Bloomberg survey.

Taiwan’s economy is one of the main beneficiar­ies of a surge in global demand for the hardware underpinni­ng AI technologi­es, such as semiconduc­tors and servers. GDP is likely to expand 3.43 per cent this year, the statistics bureau said in its most recent forecast in February.

Taiwan’s exports surged 18.9 per cent in March, the fastest pace in two years, as shipments of computers and related hardware needed for AI rocketed more than 400 per cent.

But the first quarter may be as good as it gets for a while. Economists and government statistici­ans say growth is likely to slow in the coming quarters, due in part to a higher base of comparison with last year’s figures.

In the past few weeks, chip giants Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co and Intel both offered tepid forecasts for semiconduc­tors and the global smartphone and personal-computing markets.

The more pessimisti­c outlook triggered an exodus from Taiwanese stocks by foreign investors. Overseas money managers withdrew US$4.9 billion from local shares in April as at Monday’s close, Bloomberg-compiled data showed. That would be the biggest net outflow since October last year.

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? Taiwan's GDP grew 6.51 per cent to NT$5.46 trillion in the first quarter, the fastest pace since the second quarter of 2021.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG Taiwan's GDP grew 6.51 per cent to NT$5.46 trillion in the first quarter, the fastest pace since the second quarter of 2021.

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