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Mainland firms go on US$10b spending spree in Taiwan
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The Chinese mainland will send three delegations of enterprises to the island of Taiwan in the next three months to purchase goods ranging from craftwork, processed food, raw material to mechanical parts, the Ministry of Commerce announced Wednesday.

The aim is to help the people of Taiwan get business opportunities during "financially difficult times" and strengthen cross-Straits trade ties, Yao Jian, spokesman of the ministry, said in a statement.

Though the ministry did not reveal the dollar value of the purchases, China Central Television (CCTV) said the purchases could be worth "US$8 billion to US$10 billion".

The first delegation will depart for Taiwan on May 31 to buy home appliances, communication products and computers, CCTV said.

Li Shuilin, head of the Association of Economy and Trade Across the Taiwan Straits, a non-government organization, will lead the first delegation, the ministry said.

Taiwan media reported that Chen Deming, the mainland's minister of commerce, will lead a 1,000-member purchase delegation to Taiwan by the end of June. It would make Chen the highest-ranking mainland official to visit the island.

Taiwan's "Mainland Affairs Council" Vice-Chairman Chao Chien-min said the purchasing groups from the mainland will help the people of the island get some business, the Taiwan-based Central News Agency reported.

"It (the move) shows the mainland's kindness toward Taiwan. Despite billions of dollars of trade deficit against Taiwan, Beijing is still sending purchase groups to help the island," said Wu Nengyuan, director of the Fujian-based Institute of Taiwan Studies.

Last year, cross-Straits trade amounted to US$129.2 billion. The mainland imported US$103.34 billion and exported US$25.88 billion in goods, resulting in a trade deficit of US$77.46 billion.

The purchases will help the island's export-based economy tide over the financial crisis and boost two-way trade, which has dropped recently, Wu said.

From January to April, trade between the mainland and Taiwan dropped 40 percent - to US$26.35 billion - compared with the same period last year.

Imports from Taiwan amounted to US$21.15 billion, down 40.8 percent, according to figures from the customs department.

Yang Lixian, a Beijing-based expert with National Society of Taiwan Studies, said export-driven Taiwan has been hit hard by the global meltdown.

"The mainland has taken concrete measures to support the recovery of Taiwan's economy," said Liu Xueqin, a researcher with the Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation, a research body under the ministry of commerce.

(China Daily May 21, 2009)

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