TAOYUAN (Taiwan) - FORK-LIFT trucks are buzzing around a terminal of Taiwan's first free trade zone despite the global economic crisis that has seen shipments from ports elsewhere on the island tumble.
What to expect
Taoyuan's free trade zone is slated for enlargement to 290 hectares in response to the cross-Strait flights and rising demand for air cargo in the Asia-Pacific region, according to the blueprint laid out for the future aerotropolis.
The government plans to spend nearly NT$500 billion to upgrade infrastructure over the next four years, with half that amount going to aerotropolis-related projects, including a rail system linking the airport to the island's capital Taipei.
Farglory, the company that operates the bonded zone outside the northern city of Taoyuan, says the economic downturn is a crisis in theory only here, as business just keeps getting better.
'Companies at the zone have not felt the pinch of the global economic crisis. Their revenues keep growing,' said Yeh Chun-yao, chairman of Farglory Free Trade Zone Holding Co.
Taiwan, the sixth biggest economy in Asia, has been hit hard by the global financial crisis. April exports fell 34.3 per cent year-on-year to US$14.85 billion (S$21.4 billion), the eighth consecutive monthly decline. But as the island suffers generally, the free trade zone, which occupies 45 hectares next to Taoyuan's airport, has attracted around 20 international enterprises and 40 local firms. Among the latest players to relocate here is the local branch of courier giant DHL Express.
The enclave and the airport have been labelled the 'egg yolk' at the heart of a 'fried-egg theory' proposed by the transport ministry as the government aims to build the area into an 'aerotropolis' - that is, a centre for all things associated with aviation - as well as a regional hub.
The idea of transforming Taiwan into a regional transportation hub dates back to the mid-1990s when the nationalist Kuomintang (KMT) government launched massive investment projects in the midst of a booming economy.
But time ran out to make good on those ambitions, which included dreams of becoming a banking, telecommunications and media centre, when the KMT lost the 2000 presidential polls to the pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), ending its 51-year grip on power. The DPP, under then president Chen Shui-bian, scrapped many of the projects here during its eight years in office.
But with the KMT's return to power last year, President Ma Ying-jeou has put the zone back on his list of priorities as he focuses on improving ties with former arch rival China and boosting the island's faltering economy.
'Previously, the root cause of the related problems was the lack of direct transportation links' between Taiwan and China, just across the Taiwan Strait, said Taoyuan county magistrate Eric Chu.
'Now the barriers have been removed after the Ma administration was inaugurated,' said Mr Chu, also a vice chairman of the KMT, referring to talks that have led to direct flights and deepened economic ties across the Strait. -- AFP