‘Third parties’ should not interfere in Taiwan’s dealings with the EU, Taiwan minister says

‘Third parties’ should not interfere in Taiwan’s dealings with the EU, Taiwan minister says


China should not interfere with commercial dealings between Taiwan and the European Union especially when increased economic resilience between the two sides contribute to the benefit of the global economy, a senior Taiwan minister told CNBC.

Taiwan would pursue a new free trade agreement with the EU should high-level talks with the bloc over the tightening of semiconductor supply chains yield a wider deal, Taiwan’s deputy minister for economic affairs, Chen Chern-Chyi, said Friday.

Semiconductor-powerhouse Taiwan is holding rare ministerial-level discussions with the EU to boost its chip industry and supply chain with Europe, while also engaging with the U.S. on new trade talks. The discussions have drawn the ire of Beijing which has called for all parties to observe the one-China policy. 

Taiwan is democratically self-ruled but Beijing claims the island as part of its own territory and has never renounced the use of force to bring the two together. 

I think third pirates should not intervene or obstruct this kind of positive cooperation between parties.

Chen Chern-Chyi

Taiwan’s deputy minister for economic affairs

“Beijing always expresses their opposition to our economic cooperation with our partners but this is for the global benefit, for the welfare of humankind,” Chen said during an exclusive interview on CNBC’s “Street Signs Asia.”

“I think third parties should not intervene or obstruct this kind of positive cooperation between parties.” 

Chen said Taiwan’s discussions with the EU and the U.S. were imperative to the resilience of the global supply chains.

To that end, Taiwan regularly looks to shore up its trade dealings with its global partners and the EU is no different, particularly given that the bloc is Taiwan’s fifth largest trading partner with 50 billion euros ($53.8 billion) in bilateral trade. Taiwan is a key supplier of semiconductor chips to many European manufacturers, Chen added. 

The Taiwanese official also said he is not expecting a backlash from Beijing but Taiwan’s 40-year history of “managing mainland China” will hold them in good stead in handling any fallout. 

High-level talks like the one with the EU help to advance Taiwan toward its goals of cutting as many trade deals as possible including one with the EU.

Taiwan hopes to join Indo-Pacific framework

Taiwan has also expressly asked to join the new U.S.-led Indo-Pacific Economic Framework even though it was left out of the initial 13-country membership, Chen said. 

Taiwan’s membership to the IPEF would help meet one of the framework’s key tenets, that is, stronger supply chain resilience in the region, Chen added. 

“We will pursue that goal to have enhanced and institutional trade relations with the EU. We have endeavored to have this with the U.S. and to join in multilateral trade deals like the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership and we will not give up and continue our efforts,” Chen said. 

“To include Taiwan into IPEF makes sense and is important.”

Read more about China from CNBC Pro

Political observers have said the U.S. did not include Taiwan in the Indo-Pacific Partnership to avoid a political storm with Beijing, particularly on the recognition of the One-China policy. 

“For the U.S., allowing Taiwan to join the IPEF framework under the same name runs the risk of providing legitimacy to arrangements that degrade or belittle Taiwan’s sovereignty,” political scholars Yao-Yuan Yeh, Charles K. S. Wu, Fang-Yu Chen, and Austin Horng-En Wang said in a recent analysis in the Diplomat.

“The name of ‘Taiwan’ is a non-starter, too, as it would challenge the current U.S. One China policy.”

Additionally, excluding Taiwan would have allowed other Asian countries — not willing to offend China —to join the IPEF, other analysts have said.

Separately, Taiwan has applied to join the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), alongside mainland China. 

The CPTPP — the second largest trade bloc in Asia-Pacific — is conditional on approval by all 11 members of the bloc. It has its genesis in the original U.S.-led Trans-Pacific Partnership, which Donald Trump formally withdrew from in 2017.

When asked if Taiwan would influence Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, the world’s largest contract chipmaker, to increase its tie-up with Europe, Chen said it was up to TSMC to make its own commercial decisions. He added that Taiwanese officials regularly encourage Taiwanese companies to deploy their businesses globally.



Source

10-year Treasury yield lower as investors mull rates path following strong GDP data
World

10-year Treasury yield lower as investors mull rates path following strong GDP data

U.S. Treasury yields edged slightly lower on Wednesday as investors positioned for a shortened trading day ahead of the holidays. The 10-year Treasury yield — the benchmark for U.S. government borrowing — was 1 basis point lower at 4.159% by 4:15 a.m. E.T. Yields on the 2-year Treasury note were largely unchanged, at 3.528%. The 30-year bond yield, meanwhile, […]

Read More
Oil giant BP to sell 65% stake in  billion Castrol unit
World

Oil giant BP to sell 65% stake in $10 billion Castrol unit

Britain’s BP has agreed to sell a 65% shareholding in lubricants business Castrol to Stonepeak for $6 billion, months on from the oil giant seeking a buyer for the unit. The deal comes as the company looks to launch a strategic reset, including a green strategy U-turn and the divestment of $20 billion of assets […]

Read More
European markets poised for lackluster open ahead of shortened trading session
World

European markets poised for lackluster open ahead of shortened trading session

LONDON — European markets are expected to open in flat to negative territory as investors take stock of the volatile year during Christmas Eve’s shortened trading session. The U.K.’s FTSE 100 and Germany’s DAX were last seen edging below the flatline, while France’s CAC was 0.1% lower according to data from IG Group. The pan-European Stoxx […]

Read More