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International Relations

India Receives Taiwan’s Assistance

  • 05 May 2021
  • 6 min read

Why in News

Recently, India received Covid-19 assistance from Taiwan including oxygen concentrators and cylinders.

  • The aid reflects the growing engagement between India and Taiwan, especially against the backdrop of the standoff with China on the Line of Actual Control (LAC) and China’s aggressive actions across the region, including repeated violations of Taiwan’s airspace.
  • India, meanwhile, has not yet accepted China's offers of aid and assistance and has preferred to source medical supplies from China on a commercial basis.

Taiwan

  • Taiwan - the Republic of China (ROC), home to twenty-three million people, is an island off the southern coast of China that has been governed independently from mainland China since 1949.
  • Its neighbours include China (officially the People’s Republic of China, PRC) to the west, Japan to the northeast, and the Philippines to the south.
  • Taiwan is the most populous state that is not a member of the United Nations (UN) and the largest economy outside the UN.
  • Taiwan is Asia’s 5th largest economy.
  • It is a global leader in chip manufacture and the second-largest manufacturer of IT hardware, etc.
  • Relationship between China and Taiwan:
    • The People’s Republic of China (PRC) views the island as a province, while in Taiwan—a territory with its own democratically elected government—leading political voices have differing views on the island’s status and relations with the mainland.
    • China and Taiwan maintain a fragile relationship, which has improved during the past seven years but is periodically tested.
    • ‘One China Policy’ is the diplomatic acknowledgement of China's position that there is only one Chinese government.
      • This means that countries seeking diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China (PRC, Mainland China) must break official relations with the Republic of China (ROC, Taiwan) and vice versa.

Key Points

  • India-Taiwan Relations:
    • Diplomatic Relations:
      • India and Taiwan do not have formal diplomatic relations but since 1995, both sides have maintained representative offices in each other’s capitals that function as de facto embassies. India has backed the “one-China policy”.
    • Economic Relations:
      • Trade ties amounted to USD 7.5 billion in 2019, up from USD 1 billion in 2000.
      • India and Taiwan in 2018 signed a bilateral investment agreement.
        • There are around 200 Taiwanese companies in the field of electronics, construction, petrochemicals, machine, Information and Communications Technology and auto parts operating in India.
      • In the field of science and technology, there are more than thirty ongoing government-funded joint research projects.
    • Cultural Relations:
      • Both sides have also expanded educational exchanges after a mutual degree recognition agreement in higher education was signed in 2010.
  • Challenge in the Relations:
    • One China policy: India finds it difficult to realise the full potential of its bilateral relationship with Taiwan. At present, about 15 countries worldwide continue to recognise Taiwan as an independent state. India is not among the sixteen countries.
    • Hurdles in Economic Cooperation: Taiwan’s increased investments have occurred in the face of cultural challenges, bureaucratic hurdles, and pressure on India from domestic producers.
  • Scope of Increasing Ties with Taiwan:
    • Taiwan is an important geographical entity in the Indo-Pacific region. India’s vision of the Indo-Pacific is inclusive and it must encourage the participation of Taiwan and other like-minded countries.
    • India is already a major focus country in Taiwan’s New Southbound Policy, launched in 2016. Under this, Taiwan aims to increase its international profile by expanding political, economic, and people-to-people linkages.
      • Taiwan’s reputation as the world leader in semiconductor and electronics complements India’s leadership in ITES (Information Technology-Enabled Services).
      • This can contribute much to the “Make in India”, “Digital India” and “Smart Cities” campaigns.
      • Taiwan’s agro-technology and food processing technology can also be very beneficial for India’s agriculture sector.
    • Taiwan is an integral part of the regional supply chain mechanism, and a trade agreement with Taiwan will help India remain connected to the regional economic dynamism, amidst its attempts to de-couple from China.

Way Forward

  • The two countries are vibrant democracies, and parliamentary interactions and visits can strengthen their commitment towards the rule of law and good governance.
  • The objective of this deepening engagement is not to field ties with Taiwan as a countermeasure to growing animosity with China, but to de-hyphenate India-Taiwan ties from India-China relations. Taiwan is reaching out to India; India too should reciprocate.

Source:TH

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