adb aten kvm
Transcription
adb aten kvm
Eugene Y.J. Chen Chief Secretary Bureau of Foreign Trade November 19, 2015 1 4 Taiwan’s Economic Situation 2 Taiwan’s Unique Advantages in Global Markets 3 Trade and Economic Relationships between Belgium and Taiwan Potential Business Opportunities for Belgium and Taiwan 2 1 Taiwan’s Economic Situation 3 GDP Unemployment Rate US$ 529.6 billion (2014) 2.70% (2016 forecast); 1.56% (2015); 3.77% (2014) 3.89% (Sep. 2015); 4.12% (2014) Consumer Price Index 0.28% (Sep. 2015); 1.20 % (2014) Economic Growth Rate FDI Total Trade Value Total Export Value Total Import Value US$ 3.31 billion (Jan.-Sep. 2015); US$ 5.77 billion (2014); US$ 134.4 billion (1952-2015.07) US$ 428 billion (-13%) (Jan.-Oct. 2015) US$ 588 billion (2.15%) (2014) US$ 236 billion (-9.6%) (Jan.-Oct. 2015) US$ 314 billion (2.70%) (2014) 20th largest in the world US$ 192 billion (-16.8%) (Jan.- Oct. 2015) US$ 274 billion (1.53%) (2014) 18th largest in the world 4 Participating in multilateral trade talk Realizing trade liberalization and facilitation Engaging in regional economic integration Strengthening trade promotion 5 Top player in the world’s ICT industry as well as a major supplier of goods across the industrial spectrum. Excels in the fields of semiconductors, optoelectronics, information technology, communications, and electronics. At present, the economy is shifting toward nanotechnology, biotechnology, optoelectronics, green energy, space science and the tourism service industry. The service sector as a whole accounts for more than 64% of Taiwan’s GDP. 6 2 Taiwan’s Unique Advantages in Global Markets 7 I. International Competitiveness 1. Ranked #11 globally, #3 in Asia Ranked #3 globally in “percentage of high-tech goods in manufactured exports” IMD’s World Competitiveness Yearbook 2015 2. Ranked #14 globally, #4 in Asia Ranked #2 globally in “State of cluster development” WEF’s The Global Competitiveness Report 2014-2015 II. Ease of Doing Business 1. Ranked #19 globally, #5 in Asia Ranked #2 globally in “Getting electricity” World Bank’s Doing Business 2015 2. Ranked #5 globally, #2 in Asia Business Environment Risk Intelligence’s Business Risk Reports 2015 8 III. Knowledge-Based Economic Performance Higher than OECD Countries Ranked #1 in Asia Double the average score in Asia and the Pacific, higher than the OECD average Asian Development Bank’s Knowledge Economy Index 2014 IV. Economic Freedom Improved for 6 Consecutive Years Ranked #14 globally, highest ranking in history The Heritage Foundation and The Wall Street Journal’s 2015 Index of Economic Freedom V. Top Entrepreneurship in Asia Ranked #8 globally, #1 in Asia The Global Entrepreneurship and Development Institute’s 2015 Global Entrepreneurship Index 9 10 Competitiveness of Trade Logistics 4.2 Taiwan ranked #4 in Asia in the Logistics Performance Index 4.1 4.0 3.9 3.8 3.7 3.6 3.5 3.4 3.3 3.2 2007 Overall Customs Logistic Competence 2010 2012 International Shipment Infrastructure 2014 Timeliness Tracking & Tracing Source: Connecting to Compete 2014, Trade Logistics in the global Economy, The Logistics Performance Index and Its Indicators, World Bank 11 ■ Hsinchu IC manufacturing Optical Bio technology ■ Taichung Semiconductor and Optical Bio technology Automation ■ Changhua Green energy Surface treatments ■ Tainan Optical Automobile parts Mechanical automations ■ Kaohsiung Petrochemical Boat components and assemble Metal enhancement IC, Optical, Communication and Green energy ■ Nangang IC design Digital content Bio technology Ranked #1 and #2 in “State of cluster development” in 2013 and 2014 (WEF’s Global Competitiveness Report) 12 USPTO Patent granted to Taiwan in 2014 Patent Type: All 12,254 Patent per million population Patent Type: Utility 11,332 Ranked #5 (following US, Japan, Korea, Germany) Source: US Patent and Trademark Office Patent Type: All 532 Patent Type: Utility 492 Ranked #1 Innovation Scale Global Rank Finland 1 Switzerland 2 Israel 3 Japan 4 United States 5 Germany 6 Sweden 7 Netherlands 8 Singapore 9 Taiwan 10 Source: The Global Competitiveness Report 2014-2015 by WEF 13 3 Trade and Economic Relationships between Belgium and Taiwan 14 According to the Customs’ statistics of Taiwan, Belgium was the 7th largest trade partner of Taiwan in the EU in 2014. Taiwan was the 8th largest trade partner of Belgium in Asia in 2014, with trade between the two countries totaling US$ 1.9 billion. million USD 2,500 Total Trade 2,000 1,500 Export to Belgium 1,000 Import from Belgium 500 0 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 15 Import ◦ Jan.-Oct. 2015: US$ 0.59 billion (-7.73%) ◦ 2014: US$ 0.65 billion (-13.33%) ◦ Main items: chemicals, cars and medications Export ◦ Jan.-Oct. 2015: US$ 0.9 billion (-15%) ◦ 2014: US$ 1.2 billion (10.34%) ◦ Main items: stainless steel, bikes and screws 16 From 1952 till Sep. 2015, the accumulated investments of Belgium into Taiwan were US$ 102 million. ◦ Main industry: chemical, car parts, power equipment, retail, finance and insurance Taiwan into Belgium were US$ 8.6 million. ◦ Main industry: retail, chemical material manufacturing, transportation and warehousing, other manufacturing In 2014, Taiwan invested a total of US$ 2.75 million in Belgium, increasing more than five times the sum of previous two years. 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 1-9 1952-2015 Belgium to Taiwan cases 1,000 US$ 4 2,219 2 199 3 4,374 3 11,055 3 343 5 609 12 1,953 4 6,015 82 102,422 Taiwan to Belgium cases 1,000 US$ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 420 1 1 1 2,747 0 0 11 8,581 17 Belgian companies with subsidiaries or branch offices in Taiwan ◦ Barco, Dredging International, Heraeus Electro-nite, IMEC, Option, Solvay, UCB, Umicore, Velleman Components and Verhaert Taiwanese companies with operating centres or subsidiaries in Belgium ◦ Evergreen (maritime transport), Yang-Ming (maritime transport), Macronix (memory semiconductor solutions), United Taiwan Bank , ASE (advanced semiconductor engineering), ATEN (KVM switches) and R&G equipment (horse equipment) 18 Investment relations between Taiwan and Belgium received a boost after the bilateral "Agreement for the Avoidance of Double Taxation and the Prevention of Fiscal Evasion with Respect to Taxes on Income" entered into force on 1st January 2006. Under the agreement individuals, companies or other bodies of persons residing in Taiwan and/or Belgium will be able to avoid heavy tax burdens on business profits, profits from shipping and air transport, dividends, interests, royalties, income derived from dependent personal services etc. 19 Belgian or Taiwanese companies to which dividends, interest and royalties are paid in the other country, will only be taxed at a maximum rate of 10% in that other country under the agreement. The normal tax rate under Taiwanese law for dividends, interest and royalties for companies is respectively 25% , 20% and 20%. The double taxation agreement will bring about a considerable tax reduction for Belgian and Taiwanese companies and will be conducive to the development of bilateral investment. 20 Operating in an increasingly integrated regional supply chain, EU investors in east Asia would benefit from a broader network of investment agreements in the region. Building on the investment provisions under negotiation with China, the EU will explore launching negotiations on investment with Hong Kong and Taiwan. 21 4 Potential Business Opportunities for Belgium and Taiwan 22 Taiwan joined EEN in May 2015, enabling closer EU-Taiwan SME cooperation Co-Partner Business Cooperation EEN Taiwan Coordinator Technology Transfer R&D and Innovation Co-Partner Local-Partner Local-Partner 23 Taiwan is projected to have the highest capital expenditure for semiconductor manufacturing worldwide in 2015, reaching US$10.5 billion. Silicon Europe, an alliance consisting of micro and nano-electronics clusters from Belgium (DSP Valley) and other European countries, identified Taiwan as the top choice for international cooperation. We welcome European semiconductor equipment suppliers to collaborate with Taiwanese companies. 24 Taiwan is pushing for productivity 4.0, leveraging IOT to digitize production information and utilizing System Management, Big Data and Lean Management. ◦ The goal is to achieve a novel business model of Internet-based Service-Manufacturing. Technological capability productivity of SMEs enhancement to boost ◦ Introducing Industry 4.0 and experienced experts to help Taiwan's SMEs adopt Productivity Partnership for global market expansion ◦ Taiwanese companies are ready to serve as partners of global enterprises in the implementation of Industry 4.0. 25 26