ABSTRACT

Before the arrival of the twenty-first century, Taiwan was widely regarded as a successful model of a country which had not only transformed herself from an underdeveloped economy into a high-tech industrialised island, but had also undergone a revolution from an authoritarian regime to a democratic one. Taiwan is now experiencing a significant economic slowdown and facing multifaceted challenges including low productivity, stagnant innovation culture of small and medium-sized enterprises, ageing population, sustainable energy mix, pension reform, upgrading of human resources, devising competition policy to provide incentives for innovation as well as to limit abuses from monopolies,  warding off competition from countries with lower labour cost and managing complicated cross-Strait relationship with China. The edited book looks at Taiwan’s past successful development model, summarises Taiwan’s current situation, outlines the future challenges beyond the year 2020 and provides policy recommendations in the aforementioned aspects.

The contributors of this volume are accomplished veteran scholars in the fields. Several of them used to be policy-makers at the level of ministers or deputy ministers. The book offers not only academic contribution but policy-relevant insights.

chapter 1|15 pages

Introduction

chapter 5|16 pages

Post-catching-up science and technology trajectories

Publishing and patenting activities of Taiwan

chapter 6|21 pages

Thirty years of economic relations across the Taiwan Strait

Retrospect and prospects

chapter 7|19 pages

The PRC’s ‘Red Supply Chain’ and the Sino-American trade conflicts

Measurements and effects on Taiwan

chapter 8|23 pages

Trade potential between ASEAN countries and Taiwan

The role played by information technologies

chapter 9|18 pages

Technological learning and innovations of manufacturing firms in selected ASEAN countries

An implication for future collaboration with Taiwan

chapter 12|20 pages

Taiwan population changes in the new century

Causes and challenges 1

chapter 13|13 pages

Taiwan’s pension fund crisis

Is the defined benefit plan the answer to an ageing society?

chapter 14|22 pages

The impact of populism on the growth of income

An empirical study of the four Asian NIEs

chapter 16|18 pages

The semi-long-term low-wages dilemma in Taiwan

An examination of the role of SMEs and other institutional factors