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Asian Tigers Leave Taiwan Behind as Economic Fortunes Diverge

Of Asia’s fabled “tiger” economies, one is burning less brightly than the rest.

Asian Tigers Leave Taiwan Behind as Economic Fortunes Diverge
Pedestrians cross the street as traffic moves along an intersection in Taipei, Taiwan. (Photographer: Billy H.C. Kwok/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Of Asia’s fabled “tiger” economies, one is burning less brightly than the rest.

Taiwan is set to lag further behind its three peers -- Singapore, Hong Kong and South Korea -- economies which underwent rapid industrialization starting around the 1960s, according to data from the International Monetary Fund.

The disparity is clearest when Taiwan is stacked against South Korea, the manufacturing and consumer-electronics powerhouse that’s structurally most similar. Apple Inc.’s five largest suppliers are either Taiwanese or Korean.

Asian Tigers Leave Taiwan Behind as Economic Fortunes Diverge

Taiwan is forecast to have a gross domestic product per-capita this year of $25,977, 26 percent less than South Korea’s $32,775. By 2023, when Korea exceeds $40,000, that gap will widen to 47 percent, according to IMF projections.

A surge in Taiwanese exports since 2016 has prompted accelerating economic growth, partly a result of the island’s deep integration into the global consumer-electronics supply chain. A continuation of that trend is looking less certain, as the current smart-phone product cycle comes to an end and China gets dragged into a trade stand-off with the U.S.

Taiwan is expected to report 3.2 percent first-quarter growth on Friday, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg, down from the previous quarter’s 3.28 percent. For the full year, forecasters see output growth slowing to 2.7 percent from 2.9 percent in 2017, and dipping further after that.

Asian Tigers Leave Taiwan Behind as Economic Fortunes Diverge

What explains Taiwan’s longer-term malaise? A key weakness has been Taiwan Inc.’s inability develop to develop global brands. Meanwhile, Korea has built powerhouses such as Samsung Electronics, Hyundai Motors and LG Electronics Inc.

Taiwan’s best-known companies, led by Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. and Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., have much of their fortunes tied to supplying other companies, led by Apple Inc. Any hopes HTC Corp. would become a household name around the world for its mobile devices came to an end last year when Google bought its main smartphone engineering business.

“The manufacturing sector’s ability to innovate and upgrade to higher value-added sets Taiwan and Korea apart,” DBS Group Holdings Ltd. economist Ma Tieying said via telephone. “This explains why productivity is higher in Korea than in Taiwan.”

--With assistance from Chinmei Sung

To contact the reporter on this story: Lee Miller in Taipei at lmiller@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: John Liu at jliu42@bloomberg.net, Samson Ellis, Jeffrey Black

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.