(28) Immensely Advantageous for Taiwan

Taiwan, which has intense economic and business ties with some of the prospective member states of the yet-to-be-formed Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) is very keen to join this group. This was underscored by the fundraising chair and the key player of the “Taiwan for TPP Committee,” Yeni Wong, in an exclusive interview.


Yeni’s one-hour discussion centered on the largest free-trade agreement ever negotiated by the United States and the controversy it has churned up during a political year. The TPP encompasses the United States and eleven Asian Pacific countries—Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Singapore, Peru, and Vietnam.

Yeni, who is a business juggernaut and was educated at the University of Illinois at Chicago, emphasized Taiwan’s strong trading and business ties with members of the TPP. She highlighted the significance of groupings such as the TPP for Taiwan’s economy, which is heavily reliant on foreign trade. Yeni is among those advocating for Taiwanese membership in the TPP. She tried to explain why it is of pressing importance that the United States support Taiwan’s bid to join the next round of negotiations for the regional trade bloc TPP and work directly with Taiwan to boost US domestic prosperity and actively promote peace and stability in the Asia Pacific.

She noted that international trade is definitely the lifeblood of vibrant economies, and now is the time to reaffirm American shared values and the mutual stake we have with Taiwan in promoting a peaceful and prosperous Asia Pacific region. Taiwan is an economic powerhouse and a center of technological innovation. Over the past half century, it has grown from an agricultural society into an indispensable link in the global supply chain. Taiwan’s high-tech enterprises embody the dynamism that has made the country a force in the global economy. Sustaining a productive partnership with Taiwan is an important driver of domestic prosperity and is particularly critical to the success of US strategic goals in the Asia Pacific region.

Here’s a transcript—edited for length and clarity—of Yeni’s in-depth interview in which she laid out her thoughts on the prospects for Taiwan’s participation in TPP.

How could excluding Taiwan from the TPP affect the US presence in Asia?

Taiwan is an economic powerhouse and a center of technological innovation. Over the past half century, Taiwan has grown from an agricultural society into an indispensable link in the global supply chain. Taiwan’s vibrant democracy fosters a culture of creativity, spurring the nation to achieve breakthroughs in research and development. Taiwan’s high-tech enterprises embody the dynamism that has made Taiwan a force in the global economy. By seeking to join the TPP, Taiwan aims to share its spirit of entrepreneurship and innovation with regional economies.

The United States and Taiwan share many basic principles, such as democracy, human rights, and trade. In particular, Taiwan is very important to the US economy. Trade ties between Taiwan and the United States have grown closer in recent years. Taiwan has surpassed India and Saudi Arabia to become the United States’ ninth-largest trading partner, while the United States is Taiwan’s second-largest trading partner. Bilateral trade between the United States and Taiwan reached $67.4 billion in 2014.

Why should Taiwan be included in the TPP deal?

Take the close US-Taiwanese economic relations, for example. In 2013, two-way trade volume between the two countries reached $63.6 billion. The US goods and services exports to Taiwan, along with Taiwan’s investment in the United States, so far have created or supported more than three hundred thousand American jobs, according to the US Department of Commerce. In the first quarter of this year, Taiwan became the ninth-largest US trading partner globally, ahead of such large economies as India, Russia, and Australia. If Taiwan is included in the trade agreement, it means more US exports, market access, and American jobs. The TPP would further encourage Taiwanese firms to invest more in the United States.

Taiwan is a central geographic hub for the Asia Pacific region and a leading supplier of intermediate goods and components such as high-end electronics and leading edge performance fabrics to Asia Pacific supply chains. US companies partner closely with Taiwanese firms, relying on them to use the region’s supply chains to deliver products on schedule and efficiently. Over the past few years, Taiwan signed the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement with China, an investment agreement with Japan, and economic cooperation pacts with New Zealand and Singapore. These agreements demonstrate the country’s firm determination and all-out effort to liberalize its economy and participate in regional economic integration.

Taiwan is now ready to work proactively with the United States to contribute to the high standards of the TPP. As a first step toward its admission to the system, Taiwan, hopefully, can conclude a bilateral investment agreement with the United States to further regularize its extensive business exchanges with this country, leading to a closely connected US-Taiwanese partnership and heading toward the Trans-Pacific Partnership.

Why should the United States support TPP membership for Taiwan?

TPP is a vital component of the United States’ continued involvement in a rapidly shifting Asia. Not only is Taiwan a vital economic and security partner of the United States in East Asia, as noted by senior US officials, but Taiwan also plays an important role in the global supply chain of the IT industry. Many US senior officials have already publicly welcomed Taiwan’s entry into the TPP and stated that the United States will give Taiwan serious consideration as a candidate for TPP membership.

As a dynamic and longtime US ally devoted to regional peace and stability, Taiwan’s inclusion in TPP strengthens US ties with other like-minded economies in Asia. Taiwan is also too important to the global economy and to the prosperity of the Asia Pacific region to be left out of this vital trade agreement. It makes sense to include one of the United States’ strongest democratic allies in East Asia and to use the tool of regional integration to benefit both the US and Taiwanese economies.

Why should Taiwan be part of second-round TPP negotiation?

As the administration follows through on its rebalancing of Asia policy, Taiwan will play an integral role. Since Taiwan is one of America’s strongest allies in Asia, the United States needs to continue to support Taiwan’s inclusion in the TPP; otherwise, Taiwan will fail to remain competitive, which may result in a decrease of purchases of American products. This, in turn, could negatively affect American farmers and manufacturers that count on Taiwan to buy their products.

A presence is not just battleships or aircraft carriers. You have to have trade and have the goods exchanged. And the TPP is Washington’s way of doing this. The United States has demonstrated its leadership in successfully negotiating an ambitious blueprint for economic governance. But this will mean little if the TPP does not include Taiwan’s vast economy. It is of pressing importance that the United States support Taiwan’s bid to join the next round of negotiations for the regional trade bloc Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).

Why does Clinton support the Trans-Pacific Partnership while Trump does not?

Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton originally seemed to back TPP and spoke positively about the negotiations when she was the US secretary of state, but once the pact was negotiated, she said she couldn’t support it in its current form because it didn’t provide the basic safety net that American workers need to compete in the global economy. Republican presumptive nominee Donald Trump has been adamant about denouncing the trade pact or any kind of free-trade agreements, noting that as president he would slap a 45 percent tariff on Chinese-made goods and tariffs on many other imports and bring back manufacturing jobs to the United States.

[Yeni shied away from discussing anything that Clinton or Trump might do if they were elected president, but she did note that research has shown that launching a trade war and curtailing free trade would stifle US exports, leading to job losses and a recession. “Globalization is happening. It’s like the genie. We can’t put it back in the bottle, but we can use free-trade agreements to shape and open other markets and then raise standards in those countries so there is a more level playing field,” she said.]

What are the strategic implications of Taiwan’s participation in TPP?

Noting that Taiwan is the United States’ ninth-largest trading partner and its seventh-largest market for agricultural products, Yeni said the two sides are discussing a wide range of issues under the bilateral Trade and Investment Framework Agreement (TIFA). These issues, for instance, include increasing trade and encouraging Taiwanese investments in the United States, she said.

What Taiwan and the United States are discussing under the TIFA would also “be a kind of a stepping-stone to things that would need to be done by Taiwan in order to qualify itself for entry into TPP [Trans-Pacific Partnership],” Yeni added. On the question of Taiwan’s ban on US pork that contains residues of the leanness-enhancing drug ractopamine, Yeni said Taiwan’s standards on meat imports would be one of the issues that would “come into play at some point” in bilateral talks. The US stance is that “these kinds of standards should be based on scientific standards and things that can be shown and proven through experience and experimentation,” she said.

The top Taiwanese entrepreneur in Washington made a passionate plea for US leaders to more vocally support Taiwan’s inclusion in key Western-backed institutions on the world stage—especially as the tiny island democracy engages in increasingly complex economic ties with China. “The more we engage with China, the more support we need from the United States,” Yeni told me in an exclusive interview at the Institute for Taiwan-America Studies headquarters on H Street.


At the end of the interview, Yeni appealed to the United States to support Taiwan’s inclusion in the TPP: “Membership for Taiwan would not only benefit both our countries but also support our common desire for peace and prosperity in the region,” she concluded.