Taipei not adverse to China ties: Lin

By Adela Lin, Samson Ellis and Miaojung Lin / Bloomberg





Premier Lin Chuan (林全) said he is not opposed to stronger economic ties with China, even as the administration looks to boost its trade links with the US and Southeast Asia.

China is a big market and many industries across the Taiwan Strait complement each other, Lin, 65, said in his first interview with foreign media since he was sworn in almost a year ago.

“We shouldn’t push it away,” Lin said at his offices in Taipei on Friday.

Premier Lin Chuan speaks during an interview with Bloomberg reporters in his offices in Taipei on Friday. Photo: Anthony Kwan, Bloomberg

“As it is a huge market over there in mainland China, it behooves Taiwan to maintain friendly, smooth economic relations,” Lin said. “In doing that, there’s no downside for Taiwan.”

“So as far as trade and the division of labor are concerned, the cross-strait economic relationship isn’t something that should be avoided,” Lin said.

Lin’s comments come as President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) proposes a new model for cross-strait relations with a focus on structural cooperation.

It is a careful balance: Some lawmakers in Tsai’s Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) criticized her predecessor for a perceived over-reliance on China, which accounted for as much as 41.8 percent of Taiwan’s exports during Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) administration.

While Lin’s portfolio includes the economy, relations with China are overseen by Tsai.

Lin said Taiwan also wants to foster trade links with other nations to reduce domestic anxiety over a dependence on China. Chinese opposition to such moves could hurt ties, he added.

“He was addressing the objective reality,” according to Alexander Huang, chairman of the Taipei-based Council on Strategic & Wargaming Studies. “The high reliance results from the choice of businesses like Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co and Foxconn Technology Group, instead of governments.”

Free-trade deals are necessary for a small, open economy like Taiwan, Lin said.

“We will adopt low-key and pragmatic measures to establish better economic relations with other countries,” the former minister of finance minister and Directorate-General of Budget, Accounting and Statistics director-general said.

Lin said a US free-trade pact could help enhance the competitiveness of Taiwanese products, though he added it would depend on US interest in having such talks. Taipei could also seek discussions with the EU, he said.

Tsai said in March that Taiwan and the US should engage in talks on trade as a matter of priority.

“Both sides should have frank and substantive discussions and work toward a new bilateral trade agreement,” she said.

Ongoing talks under the Trade and Investment Framework Agreement will provide a forum to discuss related issues, American Institute in Taiwan Director Kin Moy said in March.

Tsai’s administration is also seeking closer ties with Australia, New Zealand, the 10 members of the ASEAN and six South Asian countries. In the period from June last year to March, inbound visitors from those areas surged 23 percent on-year to 1.63 million, according to a Cabinet statement.

Still, “China will see this as not just an economic issue but a political one,” Lin said, adding “that’s regrettable for us.”

“China should think these things through more clearly,” he said. “If Taiwan establishes better economic ties with other countries, it’s not just good for Taiwan, it’s good for economic ties across the Strait.”

Diversified economic relations could help counter domestic objections to economic links with Beijing, Lin said.

“Only when Taiwan has better economic relationships with other countries can Taiwan and China share closer economic ties and more opportunities,” he said.