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Taiwan tech companies’ exit from China fuels $25bn investment drive

The rumble of construction rings out in the northern Taiwanese city of Taoyuan, a sound that has become more common on the self-ruled island — and one that heralds change for mainland China.

Dozens of workers in masks scurry across the site as two cranes hoist beams high into the sky. A factory is being built for Quanta Computer, which ranks third in the world for electronics manufacturing services. The company is investing about 15bn New Taiwan dollars ($500m) in the factory to boost production of equipment such as telecommunications devices used in servers.

“We haven’t been affected by the coronavirus, so construction is still on schedule,” says a worker on site.

Quanta’s capacity build-up is not an isolated move. Since January 2019, 189 companies have applied for government incentives to invest over NT$761.4bn in Taiwan, filings as of May 21 show. Most of the money has gone into the high-tech sector.

Taiwan’s tech manufacturers have found themselves at the forefront of the global push to move supply chains out of “the world’s factory” as rising tensions between Washington and Beijing fuel demand for servers and chips not made on the mainland.

Quanta Computer is building a new factory in the northern Taiwanese city of Taoyuan Quanta Computer is building a new factory in the northern Taiwanese city of Taoyuan © Kensaku Ihara

Quanta supplies data centre servers to US technology giants including Facebook and Google. It assembles parts made in China into products at factories in the US or Mexico. The Taoyuan plant will take over some of the Chinese production.

“We will accelerate investments in Taiwan based on demand from our customers,” said Barry Lam, Quanta’s chairman.

He added that more customers in the telecommunications sector wanted equipment without Chinese-made parts, given the US crackdown on Huawei Technologies and other Chinese manufacturers.

This article is from the Nikkei Asian Review, a global publication with a uniquely Asian perspective on politics, the economy, business and international affairs. Our own correspondents and outside commentators from around the world share their views on Asia, while our Asia300 section provides in-depth coverage of 300 of the biggest and fastest-growing listed companies from 11 economies outside Japan.

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Other leading Taiwanese electronics manufacturers are deploying fresh capital on the island.

Innolux, a display panel maker owned by Apple supplier Hon Hai Precision Industry, or Foxconn, is investing an additional NT$70.1bn in Taiwan. It manufactures core parts in Taiwan to be assembled in China, but plans to start producing some products entirely on the island. It is building a factory in the city of Tainan that will be almost entirely automated.

Printed circuit board supplier Unimicron Technology will spend NT$26.5bn to expand a Taiwan plant. Although the company has production facilities both on the island and on mainland China, it has allocated 80 per cent of its capital spending for this year to Taiwan.

Taiwanese authorities have played a significant role in drawing Taiwanese companies back to the island. President Tsai Ing-wen, eager to reduce Taiwan’s economic dependence on the mainland, introduced new investment incentives in January 2019. The package includes eased restrictions on foreign labour and help paying interest on private-sector loans. Companies need only fulfil certain requirements, such as having invested on the mainland for two or more years, or be suffering from trade tensions between the US and China.

About NT$700bn was committed in 2019, five times as much as was approved for investment in mainland China for the year, although applications tend to cluster in an incentive programme’s first year.

Meanwhile, Taiwanese investment flows to the mainland halved in 2019. The US imposed a 10 per cent tariff on Chinese-made servers, communications equipment and other electronics in September 2018, then raised the level to 25 per cent in May 2019. Products made in Taiwan were not subject to the punitive tariff.

Taiwanese manufacturers began shifting production to the mainland in the 1990s, a step ahead of their Japanese, US and European rivals, to take advantage of China’s lower wages. Contract manufacturers including Foxconn and Quanta were a force behind this trend, which played a big role in turning China into a manufacturing powerhouse. About 70 per cent of their production happens on the mainland. An estimated 700,000 to 1m Taiwanese entrepreneurs have sought their fortunes on the mainland.

But the cost advantage of producing in mainland China has narrowed. The minimum wage in the city of Dongguan, where many Taiwanese companies have factories, has more than quadrupled in 20 years to Rmb1,720 ($240) a month.

The figure is about a third of the level in Taiwan. But with factory jobs becoming less popular, “we sometimes need to offer two or three times the minimum wage to recruit enough workers”, says an executive at one Taiwanese contract manufacturer.

The coronavirus pandemic is only expected to accelerate the shift back to Taiwan. “Distrust in China is rising in the US and Europe, which will push more companies to re-evaluate China-dependent supply chains,” says Darson Chiu of the Taiwan Institute of Economic Research.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, the world’s largest contract chipmaker, has decided to build a new plant in the US. New restrictions on exports of US chip making technology have raised hurdles to TSMC’s ability to serve as a chipmaking partner to Huawei. Taiwanese companies, long caught between their home’s political ties with the US and economic links on China, are not immune to the negative impact of the trade war between the world’s two biggest economies.

Taiwan’s efforts could serve as a test case for global attempts to rethink supply chains in light of the trade war and the coronavirus pandemic.

“We will strive to create cyber security systems and an industrial chain that can protect our country and earn the world’s trust,” Ms Tsai said in her inaugural speech for her second term this month.

version of this article was first published on May 28 by the Nikkei Asian Review. ©2020 Nikkei Inc. All rights reserved.

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