Taiwan’s elections loom just weeks away. Militarization would undermine the country’s past economic success. Due to military alignments, what happens to Taiwan at its crossroads will cast a long shadow over the Philippines as well.
TAIWAN’s presidential elections will be held on Jan. 13, 2024. Reelected in 2020, the incumbent leader Tsai Ing-wen cannot seek a third term.
Tsai’s Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) has been a divisive force that has benefited from Trump’s efforts at effective normalization and Biden’s attempt to capitalize on the consequent tensions to contain China’s economic rise regionally and globally.
But nothing in this election is what it seems to be.
DPP’s ‘American way’
After two consecutive terms, the incumbent Tsai resigned as DPP chairman in 2022, following the party’s poor performance in the local elections, which caused great concern among the DPP leadership. Afterward, Vice President Lai Ching-te (also known as William Lai) was “unanimously elected” to succeed her as the party chairman.
Tsai beat Lai in the 2020 primary. To unify the DPP, Lai was then selected to be Tsai’s running mate. There was no primary.
A legal trade scholar, Tsai spent years in the United States and the UK prior to her political career. Similarly, Lai, a public health expert, studied in the US. Recently, he named Hsiao Bi-khim, Taiwan’s envoy to the US, as his running mate. Born in Japan, Hsiao grew up in Taiwan but moved to the US as a teenager in the early 1980s. A political operative, she became active in DPP in the US, not in Taiwan. She renounced her US citizenship only in 2000.
In brief, Tsai, Lai and Hsiao have, as they say, “very intimate ties” with Washington. That seems to be the new norm from Afghanistan and Iraq to Ukraine and Israel.
Failed opposition unity
Until recently, the presidential election was dominated by four candidates: Lai Ching-te representing the incumbent DPP; medical professor Ko Wen-je, the former mayor of Taipei, representing the center-left Taiwan People’s Party (TPP); Hou Yu-ih, a police director and former mayor of New Taipei and of the major opposition party Kuomintang (KMT); and Terry Gou, founder and ex-CEO of Foxconn, the world’s largest multinational electronics contract manufacturer (Figure 1).
What complicated projections was Lai’s inability to raise his ratings and the effort by the KMT and TPP to combine their ticket. United, the two parties could have garnered up to 50 percent of the Taiwanese vote (Figure 2).
But recently, the TPP and KMT failed to agree on a joint presidential ticket. So, each has chosen his running mate. Hou opted for the fiery media personality Jaw Shaw-kong, who in the 1990s led a pro-unification party. Recently, Jaw has reiterated his view that unification is the prime way to avoid a major conflict. He believes Americans don’t want a war in the Taiwan Strait, but the US military-industrial complex does.
Ko’s running mate is a TPP lawmaker Cynthia Wu, whose family is a major shareholder of conglomerate Shin Kong Group. Like DPP leaders, Wu has close ties with the West. She is an ambitious ex-Merrill Lynch banker who used to serve as an assistant for Peter Lilley, ex-minister of the Conservative Thatcher and Major cabinets; a pro-Brexit right-winger who the satirical Spitting Image once depicted as a Nazi commandant.
The KMT/TPP combine would have been DPP’s nightmare. But the failed joint ticket is manna from heaven to the DPP, which Beijing considers secessionist.
The current status quo is a political stalemate that fails to reflect the voters’ views. One of every three Taiwanese supports DPP’s highly confrontational policies toward China. By contrast, almost every second Taiwanese would prefer a less confrontational stance and a greater focus on the domestic economy.
The stalemate situation is reflected by the tight legislative race. Currently, the DPP has a majority, but the party may fail to maintain its hold over the unicameral legislature.
US arms sales and Taiwan escalating militarization
If tensions have escalated in the Taiwan Strait, much is due to Washington’s multi-billion-dollar military aid for Taipei in recent years, including an $8 billion deal to deliver 66 F-16 fighter jets by 2026.
In the past, the US stated policy toward Taiwan prioritized peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait. Today, the strategic objective is the preemption of China’s economic rise. From Beijing’s perspective, the US is exploiting Taiwan as a pawn to undermine China.
These concerns and China’s large-scale military exercises in the area have intensified in parallel with US military escalation. Between 1950 and 2022, Taiwan was the fourth largest purchaser in the US foreign military sales; in 2020-22 combined, the largest.
In July, the Biden administration announced it would transfer $345 million in defense items to Taiwan, which was later coupled with $135 million via military financing programs. Thanks to US foreign assistance, Taiwan is also authorized to Pentagon’s stocks up to $1 billion annually in defense articles, services and training. In August, Taiwan announced plans to increase its total defense spending to a record $19.1 billion, equivalent to 2.6 percent of GDP. That outpaces even NATO allies, such as the United Kingdom, France, Italy and Germany (Figure 3).
Unfortunately, all military expenditures have opportunity costs. And the cold reality is that with increasing militarization, these costs are climbing, fast.
Politics of distraction
In the first half of the year, Taiwan’s GDP shrank, despite a rebound in the second quarter. Worse, exports to China, which Washington seeks to isolate, have not picked up in recent months, despite continuing rebound there. China remains Taiwan’s primary export market for electronic components, accounting for more than half of the total. And China plays a critical role in a host of other Taiwanese industrial sectors.
Still worse, any reconfiguration of supply chains in advanced technology, which the US is promoting in the name of “national security,” can further dampen Taiwan’s exports.
Bluntly put, the Taiwanese economy is heading toward a double-whammy. On the one hand, DPP leaders have pushed the island into the Pentagon’s arms, which is penalizing the island’s economic future. Meanwhile, this very same effort is associating Taiwan with the West’s cost-of-living crises and secular stagnation.
In the past months, private consumption still bolstered growth, but the positive effects of loosened Covid-19 restrictions have waned, and the export-oriented economy must now find new drivers of growth, as the Asian Development Bank recently suggested. Yet, militarization keeps penalizing the civilian economy.
In the late 20th century, Taiwan joined the newly industrialized Asian dragons by focusing on economic development. But since 2016, the DPP has shifted its national focus toward geopolitics. Such politics of distraction can sideline but not overcome the impending economic landmines.
In Taiwan, the key challenge is to translate the economic frustration of the people into a viable political force. Geopolitics is a recipe for a national disaster with regional, even global repercussions.
You can’t have your cake and eat it too.
Dr. Dan Steinbock is the founder of Difference Group and has served at the India, China and America Institute (US), Shanghai Institute for International Studies (China) and the EU Center (Singapore). For more, see http://www.differencegroup.net/
Updated version of the original commentary released by China-US Focus on Nov. 27, 2023