تعبير تقرير برجراف فقرة برزنتيشن بحث موضوع ملخص
جاهز باللغة الانجليزية انشاء عبارات سهل بسيط
قطعة معلومات عامة شاملة بسيطة مبسط نبذة عن الاقتصاد السكان جمل عن بلادي كلمة رحلة
مقال جمهورية دولة حول تكاليف المعيشه السياحة
للطلاب عرض للصف السادس للصف الاول للصف الثاني للصف الثالث للصف الرابع للصف الخامس
للصف السادس للصف السابع للصف الثامن للصف التاسع للصف العاشر ابتدائي جمل
سهل وقصير معالم موقع تقرير عن تراث بالانجليزي ابي موضوع ابراج خمس جمل قديما أبرز المناطق السياحية مختصر حول الحياة والعادات
والتقاليد فى لمحة تعريفية بالانجلش تلخيص
قصير كلمة تحدث تقرير انجليزي عن اي دوله مقدمة
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presentation location my country uae كم عدد
سكان مدن
الوجهات العرب المسافرون نقاط الاهتمام مساحة تحدث جغرافية جغرافيا عبارات شعر قصيدة مؤثر كلام قصير مترجم بالعربي شكل عام موضوع مؤثر كيف تكتب بالانجليزي اللغات الرسمية ديانة اسماء مدن
المناطق الريفيه الشعب الجنس رئيس لغتها الرسمية قوانين موقع الوطن عادات وتقاليد بحث علمي
Taiwan, along with South Korea,
Hong Kong and Singapore, is one of four "Asian dragoons" who
accelerated industrialization during the second half of the twentieth century
and experienced spectacular economic growth thanks to foreign trade. With 23
million inhabitants and a GDP which amounted in 2016 to 530 billion USD, Taiwan
is today the 6th largest economy in Asia and the 22nd largest economy (source
World Bank) and is classified by the IMF in the group of advanced economies. On
the political side, Taiwan is a young but mature democracy. After 8 years of
President MA Ying-jeou's (KMT - Kuo Ming Tang) government, the January 2016
election brought to power Ms. TSAI Ing-weng (Democratic Progressive Party), who
took office on May 20, two years later. an important protest movement of the Taiwanese
youth and the civil society for more independence vis-à-vis mainland China
(movement called sunflowers). Taiwan, however, suffers from a near-universal
lack of official recognition by the international community, and is not a
member of the various United Nations bodies, for example.
In the global economy, and more
particularly in Asia, Taiwan is a platform for trade and industrial production,
with imports and exports that despite two difficult years linked to the
slowdown of the Chinese economy remain equivalent in 2016 to respectively 43%
(230 billion USD) and 53% (280 billion USD) of its GDP. Taiwan is the world's
18th largest exporter of goods according to the WTO. Mainland China (y / c
Hong-Kong) is Taiwan's largest customer, absorbing nearly 40% of its exports,
ahead of Southeast Asia (21%), the United States (12%) and the EU (9.5%). Since
2013, Mainland China (y / c Hong Kong) has also become Taiwan's largest
supplier (20% market share in 2016), followed by Japan (18%), Southeast Asia (
16%), the EU (12.5%) and the United States (12%). France is its 13th largest
supplier (2.04 billion euros of French exports in 2016 according to French
customs) and its 20th customer.
Taiwan is one of the world leaders
in the electronics and information and communication technologies (ICT) sector,
which together account for 43% of the island's exports. For example, Taiwan's
global market share in motherboards and laptops is close to 90%, including
products made in mainland China by Taiwanese companies. Semiconductors are the
industry's flagship industry, led by global leaders TSMC and UMC. Taiwan also
has a strong presence in the metallurgy, mechanics, plastics and chemicals
sectors, although its positions in these traditional sectors are eroding.
The economic rapprochement with
mainland China was a central axis of the economic policy of the MA government,
concretized in particular by the establishment of direct links between the two
shores (air, sea and postal), by an agreement allowing Chinese tourists to
visit Taiwan as a group or individually (nearly 4 million Chinese visitors in
2015, but this number has dropped since the Chinese government put in place
restrictions) and the signing in 2010 of a framework cooperation agreement
(ECFA) providing for the negotiation of a number of specific economic
agreements (investment, trade in services, trade in goods, dispute settlement).
However, only the investment agreement was concluded and came into effect in
February 2013, and discussions have been suspended since the change of
government. No progress can be expected in this area as the Taiwanese
government simply hopes for a status quo. In the financial sector, a series of
agreements between the two banks, particularly between the two central banks,
allowed Taiwan to open the offshore RMB in 2013.
The Taiwanese government still
wants to join the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP) and the RCEP
regional agreement, but the prospects for both are uncertain. On the other
hand, the island participates in the WTO's plurilateral negotiations on the
Trade in Services Agreement (TiSA) and on the Environmental Goods Agreement.
The government is seeking to diversify its economic partnerships, primarily to
Southeast Asia as part of the "New Southbound Policy", but progress
is further hampered by the complex political situation of the island.
Taiwanese FDI remains very heavily
concentrated on mainland China, where it is estimated that they represent
between 150 and 200 billion USD, and to a lesser extent in Southeast Asia
(Vietnam in particular). About 80000 Taiwanese companies are located in mainland
China, where they employ 23 million Chinese employees, a sign of the
interweaving of the two economies in the Asian zone. The European Union is for
its part the first foreign investor in Taiwan (41.3 billion USD in stock at the
end of 2016).
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