Taiwanese companies have helped mainland's development in 80s-90s, but it was not their primary goal. You are making it like China would have never risen without Taiwan, and it is ridiculous.
I'm saying Taiwanese investment and exports of Taiwanese high-tech products from mainland China provided the hard currency export-earnings to modernize China.
I said the effect is the modernization of China. I never claimed the individual Taiwanese companies had the goal of modernizing China.
Individual Taiwanese companies are not a government. They could not have acted in pursuit of a coordinated policy.
My claim is the US$400 billion investment from Taiwanese companies and their exports modernized China. Taiwan is the catalyst and the "change agent." I never said Taiwan acted as part of a government policy.
----------
Yes, I am saying China would have taken 200 years to modernize without Taiwan's help.
From 1949-1976, China was among the world's poorest nations. The Chinese per-capita income was ranked #126 in the world in 1980. During the 27 years from 1949-1976, China made no headway in modernization.
Today, China is ranked #74 in nominal per-capita income. Taiwan was the difference.
From 1949-1976, Mao Zedong tried the go-it-alone approach. Mao Zedong tried to modernize China and it was a complete failure.
After 1976, Deng Xiaoping created the conditions to attract huge investments from Taiwan. Worldwide, people call it the Chinese Economic Miracle. It is called a Miracle, because the development of mainland China was far-fetched.
In the history of the world, no Third World country has made the leap to industrial superpower in 40 years. Thus, I am saying China could never have achieved full industrialization and compete in high-tech industries without Taiwan.
Taiwan's role in China's modernization is very clear.
Firstly, Taiwan provided about US$400 billion in capital for investments in mainland China. China itself was running a trade deficit and had no capital to invest.
Secondly, Taiwan holds a cumulative 150,000 USPTO patents for the last 40 years. China holds about one-fifth the Taiwan total. Without Taiwan's patents, China cannot export many high-tech products. For example, Taiwanese patents control 90% of worldwide notebook computer exports. Another example is Taiwan's AUO owning four critical LCD manufacturing patents. A third example is TSMC allowing SMIC to get off lightly after TSMC won the lawsuit against SMIC for trade secret theft.
Thirdly, Taiwan had the buyers for the Taiwanese high-tech exports.
Thus, Taiwan was instrumental along the complete chain of high-tech exports from mainland China.
Taiwan owned the patents, invested the huge capital to build the manufacturing plants on mainland China, and Taiwan had the buyers for the Taiwanese high-tech exports from mainland China.
China could never have gotten to where it is today without Taiwan.
----------
Look at the graph of China's trade balance below. China did not start to earn a significant trade surplus until after 2004.
During the 26 years from 1978-2004, Taiwan provided the capital, patents, and technology to build up China's export industries. Without those 26 years of patient investment from Taiwan, China would have no trade surplus today.