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India-Taiwan relations: Delhi wants chips, Taipei needs friends. But what about ‘one-China’?

  • By forging closer economic ties, New Delhi can benefit from Taiwanese expertise and at the same time send Beijing a ‘political message’, analysts said
  • But they warned that India and Taiwan have divergent expectations – and playing the ‘Taiwan card’ risks incurring Beijing’s wrath

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A worker inspects a semiconductor wafer at Taiwanese chip manufacturing giant Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Ltd. Photo: TSMC Handout

New Delhi and Taipei are drawing closer economically, strengthening business ties at a time of heightened cross-strait tensions and with an unresolved military stand-off at the disputed India-China border that’s heading towards its third year.

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India hopes enhanced cooperation with Taiwan’s semiconductor giants will further its goal of building up its domestic chip-making industry, while Taipei is looking to reduce its reliance on the mainland Chinese market by securing greater access to India for Taiwanese companies.

But both have a deeper motive too, analysts said – sending Beijing a “political message”.

Attendees at the 2022 India-Taiwan Industrial Collaboration Summit in New Delhi earlier this month. Photo: FICCI via Twitter
Attendees at the 2022 India-Taiwan Industrial Collaboration Summit in New Delhi earlier this month. Photo: FICCI via Twitter
Taiwan’s deputy economic minister Chen Chern-chyi visited Delhi on a whirlwind two-day tour earlier this month, in the first high-profile political visit by a Taiwanese official since the pandemic began.

Chen was accompanied by a delegation of Taiwanese business executives and industry representatives who took part in the sixth India-Taiwan Industrial Collaboration Summit, as well as the inaugural edition of a round table featuring CEOs from both sides. Their first high-level bilateral meeting in years also took place when Chen met Piyush Goyal, India’s commerce and industry minister.

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