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When business met politics: the case of Want Want, a different type of media capital in Taiwan

Lin, Lihyun; Lee, Chun-Yi

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Authors

Lihyun Lin



Abstract

Since 2008, the Taiwanese business group Want Want, having made a fortune in China, has returned to Taiwan to buy a major media group and attempt to exert political influence on Taiwanese society. This paper analyses the rise and rationale of this new type of media investor in the light of the business/government relationship under China’s model of state capitalism. According to the analysis developed in this paper, when China needed foreign investment in the early 1990s, Taiwanese investors were warmly welcomed by the Chinese government, which provided Taiwanese businesses with tax incentives at that time. After 2000, however, when not only domestic Chinese entrepreneurs emerged but also more non-Chinese investors entered the Chinese markets, Taiwanese businesses realised that the investment environment had become much more competitive, so they had to work hard on building ties with Chinese officials. Under these circumstances, Want Want bought into media in Taiwan as an asset to be used in order to build social ties with the Chinese government, but in doing so, Want Want has also triggered resistance from Taiwanese civil society. Future researchers and regulators can continue to watch and define this new type of investment, which has become increasingly significant in this region.

Citation

Lin, L., & Lee, C.-Y. (2017). When business met politics: the case of Want Want, a different type of media capital in Taiwan

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Feb 24, 2017
Online Publication Date Jun 28, 2017
Publication Date Jul 1, 2017
Deposit Date May 12, 2017
Publicly Available Date Jun 28, 2017
Journal China Perspectives
Electronic ISSN 1996-4617
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 2
Keywords Taiwanese business, Taiwan, media merger, media monopoly, cross-Strait relations, government-business relations
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/869696
Publisher URL http://www.cefc.com.hk/issue/china-perspectives-20172/
Contract Date May 12, 2017

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