作者hali0918 (~~╮↘∵‧╭~╮˙∵)
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标题[新闻] 经济学人 台湾经济最糟糕
时间Mon Apr 20 23:50:40 2009
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可以直接点进网页看罗
http://www.economist.com/displaystory.cfm?story_id=13109874
Taiwan's economy
Mirror, mirror on the wall
Feb 12th 2009 | TAIPEI
From The Economist print edition
The ugliest economy of them all?
WHICH economy has been hit hardest by the global slump? In its back pages and
on its website The Economist tracks 55 countries each week. Based on
industrial production, Taiwan has suffered much the biggest shock. Output
fell by 32% in the 12 months to December; in the fourth quarter it plunged at
an annual rate of 62%. GDP figures, due on February 18th, will be grim.
Taiwan is one of the world’s most export-dependent economies, making many
high-tech gadgets for Western consumers, so it has been battered by the slump
in global demand. Exports plunged by a record 44% in the year to January. The
slide in exports has been exacerbated by a drying up of trade credit. This
partly explains why imports also fell by 57% over the period. Exports may
therefore partly recover as credit improves. But Taiwan’s competitiveness
has been eroded by its relatively strong currency. The New Taiwan dollar has
appreciated by more than 40% against the South Korean won since the start of
2008.
Exports to China have declined by 59% over the past year, twice as fast as
exports to America. Sales to China (over one-quarter of the total) consist
largely of electronic components, and have been hit by massive Chinese
destocking. The island’s electronics industry is enduring its worst-ever
slump. Cheng Cheng-mount, a Taipei-based economist with Citibank, points out
that Taiwan’s mainstay exports, such as flat-screen monitors and
semiconductors, were in oversupply even before the global financial crisis.
Now, he estimates, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, the world’s
biggest contract chipmaker, is running at around 35% of capacity.
Falling exports have, in turn, squeezed domestic spending. Unemployment rose
to a six-year high of 5% in December, and the true picture may be far
bleaker. Taiwanese companies tend to wait until after the lunar new year
holiday before swinging the axe. Average wages have also fallen by 5% in real
terms over the past year. Many companies are ordering employees to take
unpaid leave. The volume of retail sales slumped by 11% in the year to
December.
Even before the financial crisis, household spending had seen the weakest
growth rate among the East Asian tigers. One reason is that people with the
spending power are elsewhere. Over the past eight years, around 1m Taiwanese
business executives, who form much of the island’s moneyed managerial class,
have moved to China to run factories there. Several economists are now
forecasting that Taiwan’s GDP will contract by 3% or more this year, which
would be the steepest downturn in Taiwan’s history. By far the gloomiest is
CLSA, a broking firm, which is predicting a horrendous 11% drop in 2009.
To prop up the economy, the central bank has cut interest rates six times
since September, to 1.5%. The government also plans a fiscal stimulus of
infrastructure investment, consumer handouts and tax cuts worth around 3% of
GDP in 2009. To boost consumer spending, the government is giving each
citizen a voucher worth NT$3,600 ($106). But many economists are sceptical
about whether this will produce much new spending. According to Chen Miao, an
economist with the Taiwan Institute of Economic Research, a similar
cash-handout scheme in Japan resulted in only 30% of recipients spending more
than they had already planned. Anecdotal evidence so far paints a brighter
picture. Department stores and supermarkets reported that sales over the
lunar new year holiday were 10-20% higher than in 2008.
In the longer term, improved ties with China will benefit the economy. For
example, says Mr Chen, more direct flights between Taiwan and China should
help. If Taiwan-based businessmen came home every quarter instead of every
six months, it could boost ailing consumption. For now, however, Taiwan’s
frightful economic news is more likely to encourage households to save rather
than spend.
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