Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward...

25
Taiwan

Transcript of Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward...

Page 1: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

Taiwan

Page 2: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

Content

• Taiwan in 2010• Import Substitution in 1950s• Export Promotion in 1960s• Toward High-techs• SMEs-Driven Taiwan• Credit Rationing• Foreign and Cross-Strait Trade

Page 3: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

Taiwan in 2010

• GDP (2011): $467 billion, with per capita GDP $20,083.Unemployment (April 2011): 4.29%.

• Natural resources: Small deposits of coal, natural gas, limestone, marble, and asbestos.

Page 4: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

Industry Structure in 2010

• Agriculture (1.6% of GDP): Major prod-ucts--pork, rice, fruit and vegetables, flowers, sugarcane, poultry, shrimp, eel.

• Services: (67.1% of GDP).• Industry (31.3% of GDP): Types--elec-

tronics and flat panel products, chemi-cals and petrochemicals, basic metals, machinery, textiles, transport equip-ment, plastics, machinery.

Page 5: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

Export in 2010

• Exports--$274.6 billion: electronics, optical and precision instruments, in-formation and communications prod-ucts, textile products, basic metals, plastic and rubber products.

• Major markets--P.R.C. and Hong Kong $114.8 billion, U.S. $31.5 billion, Japan $14.5 billion.

Page 6: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

Import in 2010

• Imports--$251.4 billion: electronics, opti-cal and precision instruments, information and communications products, machinery and electrical products, chemicals, basic metals, transport equipment, crude oil.

• Major suppliers--Japan $36.2 billion, P.R.C. and Hong Kong $37.6 billion, U.S. $25.4 billion.

Page 7: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

Education in 2010

• Compulsory : 6 years of elementary school and 3 years of middle school.

• About 98% of middle graduates go to either a high or vocational school.

• Extensive higher education system with 165 in-stitutions of higher learning.

• 147,561 applied for admission to colleges; 100% of the applicants were offered placement and 76% of the candidates actually enrolled.

• Over 15,890 U.S. student visas were issued to Taiwan passport holders.

Page 8: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

Beginning of Industrialization in 1950s

• Rice and sugar cane had been major products during Japanese rule for 1895-1945.

• KMT confiscated all industries formerly held by Japanese.

• Land reform program redistributed land among small farmers and compensated large landowners with commodities cer-tificates and stock in state-owned indus-tries.

Page 9: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

Private-Led Industrialization

• Who would lead industrialization? Public enterprises? Or private entrepreneurs?

• KMT decided private-led industrialization.• Some large landowners turned their com-

pensation into capital to become first generation of industrial entrepreneurs.

• Refugee businessmen from the mainland joined them to transform Taiwan from an agrarian to an industrial economy.

Page 10: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

But Strong State Initiatives

• Fiscal policy : awarded tax-tariff ben-efit on industrial activities complying national plans.

• Foreign exchange control to address foreign exchange gap.

• State-owned bank system imposed low interest rate with credit rationing (investment savings gap).

Page 11: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

US Aid

• The United States resumed aid as much as $4 billion, accounting for 5 percent of GNP, to Taiwan during the Korean War, enabling Taiwan to in-vest in infrastructure.

• Agricultural production increased by 14 percent and provided much of the investment capital and labor needed for later industrialization.

Page 12: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

Import Substitution

• The first four-year economic devel-opment plan (1953–56) : reconstruc-tion, hydro-electric power, increased production of rice, fertilizers.

• In The second four-year plan (1957–60) encouraged import substitution industries.

Page 13: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

Export Promotion Begins

• The third four-year plan (1961–64) : labor-intensive export industries, en-ergy development, agricultural growth, and exploration and development of the island's limited natural resources.

• US loans and grants, totaling $2.2 bil-lion, and foreign direct investment fi-nanced these early stages of devel-opment.

Page 14: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

FDIs

• FDIs in Taiwan helped not only to fi-nance industrialization but also to in-troduce modern, labor-intensive technology, and Taiwan became a major exporter of labor-intensive products.

• Most FDIs were made by overseas Chinese and some Japanese.

Page 15: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

Frustration on Heavy and Chemical Industries in 1970s

• By 1971, exports of manufactured goods recorded a spectacular increases, and Taiwan's trade accounts changed from chronic deficit to stable surplus.

• Attempt to redirect from labor-intensive industries to capital-intensive ones such as shipbuilding, and petrochemicals.

• The worldwide recession hit adversely.

Page 16: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

Toward High-Tech in 1980s

• Focus shifted toward sophisticated, capital- and technology-intensive products such as computers, robotics, and bioengineering for export and to develop the service sector.

• The appreciation of the Taiwan dollar, rising labor costs, and increasing environmental consciousness in Taiwan kicked out many labor-intensive industries, such as shoe manufacturing, to China and Southeast Asia.

Page 17: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

1990s

• "Statute for Upgrading Industries“ was legislated in early 1991 to pro-vide incentives for private invest-ment in R&D and high-technology sectors.

• Focus in the late 1990s concentrated on expanded privatization of state enterprises, and opening of the Tai-wan market to foreigners.

Page 18: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

SME Driven Economy

• In 1985, small and medium enter-prises (those with fewer than 300 employees) contributed about 50% of value added,

• and employed 62% of the workforce,• and produced 65% of total export

value.

Page 19: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

Productivity of Taiwanese SMEs

• Levels and growth of productivity are positively correlated with firm size. Why?

- Self selection of more efficient producers that survive over time

- Larger firms enjoy better access to more re-sources, better techniques.

• In Taiwan, superior micro and small firms have grown up to medium sized firms with higher productivity.

• It was the process of survival and growth rather than the absolute size.

Page 20: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

Credit Rationing and Informal Credit Market

• Banking system had been mostly government owned until 1989.

• Credits had been rationed mainly to public enterprises and large-scale private enterprises in export-oriented industries.

• Bank credits came as additional and concessionary to most SMEs.

Page 21: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

Informal Credit Markets

• Productivity, profitability, and growth potential of industries had little effect on credit rationing decisions.

• Productive SMEs attained credit from informal markets.

• Credit from informal market was es-timated about 30-60% of total loans.

Page 22: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

Foreign Trade

• Foreign trade has been the engine of Taiwan's rapid growth during the past 50 years.

• The total value of trade increased more than 200-fold in past 50 years.

• Export composition changed from agri-cultural commodities to industrial goods (now 98%). Taiwan is the world's largest supplier of computer monitors and PCs.

Page 23: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

Continued

• Imports of raw materials and capital goods account for more than 90% of the total.

• The mainland China supplanted the US as Taiwan's largest trade partner in 2003.

• In 2010, China (including Hong Kong) ac-counted for over 29.0% of Taiwan's total trade and 41.8% of Taiwan's exports. Japan was Taiwan's second-largest trading partner with 13.3% of total trade, includ-ing 20.7% of Taiwan's imports.

Page 24: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

Cross-Strait Trade

• In February 2002, Taiwan formally permitted direct cross-Strait trade.

• Cross-Strait trade has grown rapidly over the past 10 years. China is Taiwan's largest trad-ing partner, and Taiwan is China's seventh-largest.

• Estimates of Taiwan investment on the main-land, range from $150 billion to over $300 billion, making Taiwan and Hong Kong by some measures the two largest investors in the P.R.C.

Page 25: Taiwan. Content Taiwan in 2010 Import Substitution in 1950s Export Promotion in 1960s Toward High-techs SMEs-Driven Taiwan Credit Rationing Foreign and.

continued

• On June 29, 2010, following 6 months of negotiations, Taiwan and the P.R.C. signed the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA), aimed at bringing about liberalization of cross-Strait trade in products and services, and eventually creating an essentially free-trade regime.