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TAIWANESE ECONOMY OVERVIEW General Overview of Taiwan’s Economy Taiwan’s Economic Record Taiwan as a Pioneer of and “Laboratory” for Economic Policies Lessons from the Taiwan Experience for Developing Economies Lessons for Taiwan from the Rest of the World General Overview of the Economy GDP Nominal: $466.8 billion (2011 est.) PPP: $887.3 billion PPP rank: 20th (2011 est.) GDP growth: 1.74% (2013 est.) General Overview of the Economy GDP per capita Nominal: $18,300 (2010) Nominal rank: 37th; $21,592 (2011 IMF estimate) PPP: $38,200 (2011 est.) PPP rank: 28th; $37,931 (2011 IMF estimate, 18th) General Overview of the Economy GDP by sector (2009) services (tertiary) (69.2%) industry (secondary) (29.2%) agriculture (primary) (1.6%) Inflation (CPI) 0.33% (2013 est.) General Overview of the Economy Population below poverty: 1.16% (2010 est.) Labor force: 11.2 million (2011 est.) Labor force by occupation (2011 est.) agriculture (5.2%) industry (35.9%) services (58.8%) General Overview of the Economy Main industries: Electronics, communications and information technology products, petroleum refining, armaments, chemicals, textiles, iron and steel, machinery, cement, food processing, vehicles, consumer products, pharmaceuticals Agricultural: Rice, corn, vegetables, fruit, tea; pigs, poultry, beef, milk; fish Natural: Small deposits of coal, natural gas, limestone, marble, and asbestos General Overview of the Economy Exports: $307.0 billion (2011 est.) Export goods: Electronics, flat panels, machinery; metals; textiles, plastics, chemicals; optical, photographic, measuring, and medical instruments (2011) General Overview of the Economy Main export partners: China 27.1% Hong Kong 13.2% United States 10.3% Japan 6.4% Singapore 4.4% (2012 est.) General Overview of the Economy Imports: $279.2 billion (2011 est.) Import goods: Electronics, machinery, crude petroleum, precision instruments, organic chemicals, metals (2011) Main import partners: Japan 17.6% China 16.1% United States 9.5% (2012 est.) General Overview of the Economy FDI stock $64.2 billion (at home; 31 December 2011 est.); $213.1 billion (abroad; 31 December 2011 est.) General Overview of the Economy Credit rating Standard & Poor's: AA- (Domestic) AA- (Foreign) AA+ (T&C Assessment) Outlook: Stable Moody's: Aa3 Outlook: Stable Fitch: A+ Outlook: Stable Economic Record 1. Taiwan is one of the first “Newly Industrialized Economies” (NIEs) in East Asia. 2. Taiwan has done exceptionally well despite relatively unfavorable resource endowment and population density. 3. Taiwan survived the East Asian currency crisis relatively unscathed, thanks to its large foreign exchange reserves and low external debt. Economic Record 4.. Over the last half century, real GNP and real GNP per capita have grown from approximately US$6 billion to over US$300 billion and from slightly more than US$700 to almost US$13,000 (2000 prices), achieving rates of growth of more than 8% and 6% per annum respectively. How has it been able to achieve this remarkable economic performance? Pioneering Economic Policies *Land Reform —the successful (and peaceful) land reform, one of the very few in the world, helped raise agricultural productivity, improve the income distribution, and release savings for investment in the industrial sector. *Promotion of Family Planning. *Reliance on Private Rather Than Public Enterprise. Pioneering Economic Policies *Export- Oriented Industrialization (as opposed to import-substituting industrialization). *Maintenance of Macroeconomic Stability. *Maintaining Equity with Growth. *Promoting the Transition from Tangible Capital -Based to Intangible Capital -Based Industrialization. LESSONS FROM THE TAIWAN EXPERIENCE The rate of growth of population must be brought down to manageable levels before sustained economic growth is possible. The transformation from agriculture to industry is inevitable. Private enterprise can play a major and critical role. LESSONS FROM THE TAIWAN EXPERIENCE A small economy with little or no natural resources must be open in order to develop—the exchange rate must therefore be set to equilibrate the supply and demand for foreign exchange in the long term. The transformation of the domestic savings rate is essential for sustained economic growth. Maintenance of macroeconomic stability is essential for achieving balance of payments equilibrium and promoting domestic savings. LESSONS FROM THE TAIWAN EXPERIENCE Investment in human capital can not only increase productivity but also improve the income distribution. Investment in intangible capital (human capital and R&D capital) can help to maintain economic growth after sufficient tangible capital per worker has been accumulated. THE ECONOMIC FUTURE OF TAIWAN: TRANSITION TO A SERVICE ECONOMY? MODELS NOT TO FOLLOW FOR TAIWAN United States The science base in Taiwan is too small to support a full emulation of the United States— Taiwan must be much more selective. Permanent agricultural price support is not a good idea Silicon Valley, US High cost of housing MODELS NOT TO FOLLOW FOR TAIWAN Japan (the Japanese disease) More than a decade of stagnation Heavy hand of government Lack of a vision and a strategy Inhospitable to start-up entrepreneurs Asset price bubble High leverage Inefficient non-tradable sector MODELS NOT TO FOLLOW FOR TAIWAN Hong Kong Asset price bubble South Korea It is too late for Taiwan to develop some of the traditional heavy industries, such as the automobile. The chaebols are not, in general, a good model for the promotion of innovation (there is the same problem with Japanese zaibatsu/keiretsu). MODELS NOT TO FOLLOW FOR TAIWAN European Union (the Dutch disease) The welfare state reduces the incentive to work and to save and imposes a huge fiscal burden on the government. Legislation supposedly designed to protect labor has made it almost impossible to dismiss any worker in France and Germany. THANK YOU