1 / 20

Overview of Taiwan’s Development and Implications for Relations Across the Straits

Overview of Taiwan’s Development and Implications for Relations Across the Straits. Historical Background—Japan’s colony. 1895 Annexation of Taiwan by Japan following China’s defeat in Sino-Japanese War. Historical Background—Japan’s colony.

artie
Download Presentation

Overview of Taiwan’s Development and Implications for Relations Across the Straits

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Overview of Taiwan’s Development and Implications for Relations Across the Straits

  2. Historical Background—Japan’s colony • 1895 Annexation of Taiwan by Japan following China’s defeat in Sino-Japanese War

  3. Historical Background—Japan’s colony • 1895 Annexation of Taiwan by Japan following China’s defeat in Sino-Japanese War • Contrast between European- and Japanese-style of colonial rule • Japan • Geographic proximity • Higher degree of integration with Japanese economy,especially after 1930 • Colonial bureaucracy staffed by Japanese • Policies benefitted Japan • Promoted primary education but had to study Japanese • Promoted adoption of modern agriculture techniques but had to supply Japan with sugar, rice • Higher degree of penetration/control of colonial society • Close relations between Japanese business and colonial state within colony • Large Japanese repressive apparatus Office of the Governor-General in the Japanese colonial government (now Taiwan‘s Presidential Office )

  4. Historical background • Political uncertainty during civil war • 1945 defeat of Japan in WW II • 1947 February 28th Incident • 1949 Declaration of Martial Law in Taiwan

  5. Historical background--economic development • 1950 Korean War • 1954 US-ROC Mutual Defense Treaty • US Aid to Taiwan; • land reform; • industrial policy • 1950s-1980s: • “economic miracle”: growth with equity • Export access to US market

  6. Taiwan’s Path of Industrialization in the 20th Century

  7. China’s Path of Industrialization in the Late 20th–Early 21st C

  8. Terms • Autarkic: denoting a closed economy that does not rely significantly on trade and particularly avoids imports • ISI: import-substituting industrialization • EOI: export-oriented industrialization • Primary: low-tech, low-capital intensity  labor intensive ex: toys, shoes, garments, consumer electronics • Secondary: higher-tech, higher-capital intensity capital intensive ex: automobiles, machinery

  9. Historical background—changing political situation • 1971 PRC takes up China seat in UN • 1972 Shanghai Communique • 1972 first step expanding elections to national representative bodies in Taiwan • 1977 Emergence of “dangwai (outside the party)” especially in local elections • 1979 Normalization of US-PRC Relations; US derecognition of Taiwan • 1979 Taiwan Relations Act • Peace reunification, US support for Taiwan defense

  10. Democratization • 1986 Democratic Progressive Party formed • Tolerated by KMT under Chiang Ching-kuo • 1987 Lifting of martial law in Taiwan and open emergence of Taiwan identity • 1990s: increasing economic integration of Taiwan and mainland China • 1992 New, full legislative election for Taiwan • 1996 First direct Presidential election in Taiwan: Lee Teng-hui (KMT) • PRC missile tests in Taiwan Straits in lead-up to election.

  11. Democratic consolidation • 2000 Election of Chen Shui-bian of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) with pro-independence platform  Election of opposition democratic consolidation—1 indicator

  12. Democratic consolidation • 2004 Election “Pan-Blue” vs. “Pan-Green” • “Pan-Blue (KMT, People First Party) leading in polls • Apparent assassination attempt on Chen Shui-bian • Re-election of Chen (“Pan-Green”) concurrent with • “defensive referendum” • “demand that China should renounce the use of force against the island” • Chen: “rising Taiwan consciousness” • 2004, 2008, 2012 Legislative elections—”Pan-Blue” wins more seats

  13. Subsequent elections • 2008 Election • 2012 Re-election Ma Ying-jeou (KMT) • Closer ties with Mainland • Three “no’s” • No independence • No unification • No use of force

  14. Reform of Legislative electoral system • From • Single, non-transferable vote system • To • Dual ballots • Single member districts by winner-takes-all • Nationally by proportional representative with party lists

  15. Review: Economic Integration of China and Taiwan • How and why is it emerging? • enabled by certain political initiatives • driven by economic complementarities • Geographic proximity • Exchange rates • 1980s appreciation of New Taiwan Dollar • Stricter environmental regulations in democratizing Taiwan • Ex: electro-plating arsenic in ground water • Land values increase in Taiwan in 1980s • Upward pressure on wages in Taiwan in 1980s • facilitated by linguistic and cultural affinities

  16. Taiwan and China Economic Interdependence & Relative Political lndependence

  17. “Status-quo” • Taiwan Opinion Polling • Independence even if war with China • Agree 26.7% • Disagree 73.3% • Unification even if two sides incompatible • Agree 24.3% • Disagree 75.7%

  18. Origin of Direct Foreign InvestmentCumulative 1990-2004 19

  19. Trade follows investment

More Related