Site icon Eye On Taiwan

Why Taiwan needs to keep the cross-strait trade deal alive


South China Morning Post
Date: 1 Jan, 20212
By: Jingbo Hua

​An aerial view of imported cars parked at Taipei Harbour in New Taipei City on December 8. While the world reels from the coronavirus pandemic, Taiwan is on track to end the year with enviable economic growth, buoyed in part by trade with mainland China. Photo: AFP

The Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA) has been the basis of economic collaboration between mainland China and Taiwan since it came into effect on September 12, 2010. However, as the 10-year anniversary of the agreement loomed this year, there was speculation that it could be terminated, especially given the decline in cross-strait relations under Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen.

Surprisingly, both parties remained silent amid the rumours until mid-September, when a spokesman for the Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council in Beijing said the agreement would be smoothly implemented as long as cross-strait relations develop peacefully. Meanwhile, the Mainland Affairs Council of Taiwan said all signed agreements remained effective.

In other words, Beijing and Taiwan are not willing to alter the status quo.

In 2010, Ma Ying-jeou, then Taiwan’s president, explained that under the ECFA, Taiwan’s exports to mainland China would not be restricted by high tariffs any more, and Taiwanese investments and intellectual property in mainland China would be protected. Ma also promised that the ECFA would not open Taiwan’s market to labourers and more agricultural products from mainland China.    [FULL  STORY]

Exit mobile version