China Pushes 10 Measures for Taiwan; Scholar: Political Bypass and Reshaping Dependence
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AI Summary (NQ-processed)
Following a KMT delegation's visit, China announced 10 economic measures for Taiwan. A Taiwanese scholar analyzed this as a "political bypass" strategy, aiming to circumvent Taiwan's sovereign government and reshape dependency through economic incentives tied to political constraints.
AI Analysis
Frequently Asked Questions
- Q: Who ended their visit to mainland China and returned to Taiwan?
- A: Kuomintang Chairwoman Cheng Li-wun ended her visit to mainland China and returned to Taiwan.
- Q: What specific travel and flight measures were announced by the Taiwan Affairs Office?
- A: They announced the resumption of a pilot travel program for Shanghai and Fujian residents, and normalization of passenger flights.
- Q: What role does Hong Yao-nan hold at the Center for Cross-Strait Studies at Tamkang University?
- A: He serves as the deputy director of the Center for Cross-Strait Studies at Tamkang University.
- Q: How did Hong Yao-nan describe the operational logic of Beijing's measures?
- A: He described it as using the people to urge officials, economics to promote unification, and local levels to surround the central government.
- Q: According to Hong Yao-nan, what is Beijing trying to build outside of Taiwan's constitutional framework?
- A: Beijing intends to build a usable quasi-governance channel through regular communication mechanisms with the Kuomintang.