Business | Scaling back

Why commercial ties between Taiwan and China are beginning to fray

The relationship that helped build China’s economy faces new challenges

|KUNSHAN

HUNDREDS OF JOBSEEKERS lined up outside a factory gate on a recent autumn morning. Uni-Royal, a Taiwanese maker of electronic components for such brands as Samsung and Toshiba, was looking for extra help at its plant in Kunshan, an hour’s drive west of Shanghai. New factory hands could earn 4,000 yuan ($610) a month, double the local minimum wage. Kunshan is dotted with hundreds of Taiwanese manufacturers like Uni-Royal. More than 100,000 Taiwanese call Kunshan home.

“Little Taipei”, as Kunshan is known, illustrates a broader phenomenon. Exact estimates vary, but as many as 1.2m Taiwanese, or 5% of Taiwan’s population, are reckoned to live in China—many of them business folk. Taiwan Inc has not let fraught political relations with China, which views the island as part of its territory, get in the way of business. Taiwanese companies have invested $190bn in Chinese operations over the past three decades. Foxconn, a giant Taiwanese contract manufacturer of electronics for Apple and other gadget-makers, employs 1m workers in China, more than any other private enterprise in the country.

This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline "Scaling back"

The China strategy America needs

From the November 21st 2020 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Business

What do Joe Biden and the boss of Starbucks have in common?

Both are grappling with gloomy consumers at home and trouble abroad

How not to name a new car

Companies that get it wrong risk both derision and outrage


Meet the Swedish firm trying to shake up heat pumps

It sees a big opportunity in an old technology