xuxu1457
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Many people say Taiwan’s GDP includes the part that is generated by Taiwanese enterprises located in mainland China. Is this true?
Taiwanese GDP measures abide by the IMF standard, i.e. includes the profits of Taiwanese companies (defined as companies headquartered in Taiwan), even if most of their business operations are abroad. This is because these profits are considered the productive output of the Taiwanese companies, regardless whether these profits have been sent back to Taiwan.
It is however false that the revenues/gross outputs of Taiwanese companies from overseas operation are accounted for in Taiwanese GDP - they are not. For example, if they payout wages to local employees, those are accounted in the local GDP, but not in the Taiwanese GDP.
This is also because the per capita salary in Taipei is much lower than that in Beijing and Shanghai, and the per capita salary has not changed much in the past 20 years.
The problem in South Korea and Taiwan is that big enterprises are rich and ordinary people are difficult. Taiwan's TSMC (most share belong to wall street)contributes US $60 billion a year to GDP, but it only employs 50, 000 people. sumsung account 20% of southKorea GDP, but Most of the shares and profits are owned by Wall Street
Their main economic lifelines are not their own.
Taiwanese GDP measures abide by the IMF standard, i.e. includes the profits of Taiwanese companies (defined as companies headquartered in Taiwan), even if most of their business operations are abroad. This is because these profits are considered the productive output of the Taiwanese companies, regardless whether these profits have been sent back to Taiwan.
It is however false that the revenues/gross outputs of Taiwanese companies from overseas operation are accounted for in Taiwanese GDP - they are not. For example, if they payout wages to local employees, those are accounted in the local GDP, but not in the Taiwanese GDP.
This is also because the per capita salary in Taipei is much lower than that in Beijing and Shanghai, and the per capita salary has not changed much in the past 20 years.
The problem in South Korea and Taiwan is that big enterprises are rich and ordinary people are difficult. Taiwan's TSMC (most share belong to wall street)contributes US $60 billion a year to GDP, but it only employs 50, 000 people. sumsung account 20% of southKorea GDP, but Most of the shares and profits are owned by Wall Street
Their main economic lifelines are not their own.
U.S. companies lobby for pardon for imprisoned Samsung chip tycoon - Marketplace
The American Chamber of Commerce seeks release of Jay Y. Lee, convicted of bribery. His company is mulling a big U.S. investment.
www.marketplace.org