Taiwan’s export orders down 23 per cent, China and Hong Kong lead decline despite reopening
- Taiwan’s export orders fell by 23.2 per cent in December compared to a year earlier to US$52.17 billion
- Orders to Taiwan from its biggest buyer, mainland China and Hong Kong, fell for a ninth straight month in December after dropping by 37.7 per cent
![Taiwan supplies around 60 per cent of the world’s semiconductors, including the most technologically advanced. Photo: Shutterstock](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/1020x680/public/d8/images/canvas/2023/01/31/783d114e-6c4f-4c6c-8d9a-500a759ea5e6_47dd5808.jpg?itok=MElZCyIi&v=1675161425)
Export orders from global tech hardware hub Taiwan plummeted again in December, officials in Taipei said on Tuesday, a sign of ongoing weak demand in the world’s largest economies.
Mainland China and Hong Kong led the decline in percentage terms even as the lifting of coronavirus controls began brightening the economy last month.
The value of export orders placed in Taiwan from around the world reached US$52.17 billion last month, down by 23.2 per cent compared to December 2021, Taiwan’s Ministry of Economic Affairs said.
We do expect that Taiwan will see a contraction in export orders as the semiconductor cycle is firmly on the downswing now
“We do expect that Taiwan will see a contraction in export orders as the semiconductor cycle is firmly on the downswing now, backed by an expected slowdown and pausing of tech upgrades by industries,” said Heron Lim, an economist with Moody’s Analytics.
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