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Opinion / Op-Ed Contributors

Taiwan's new leader has to abide by 1992 Consensus: Opinion

By Zhu Songling (China Daily) Updated: 2016-01-14 07:48

Despite the minor bumps, both sides are still enjoying the dividends of the enhanced economic cooperation and people-to-people exchanges of the past eight years because their ruling parties (especially the Kuomintang) adherence to the 1992 Consensus.

The mainland and Taiwan have become inseparable in many regards after years of shared peaceful development. For example, in less than eight years, the number of direct cross-Straits flights has increased from zero to 120 a week, more than 18 million mainland tourists have visited Taiwan and at least 35,000 mainland students have chosen to study there.

Although the cross-Straits trade volume and Taiwan's investment in the mainland market declined last year, in relative terms, the landmark meeting between Xi Jinping and Ma Ying-jeou in Singapore in November has already borne fruit as a hotline was opened a month later to link the cross-Straits affairs chiefs on the two sides.

The meeting also laid out the basic guideline for deepening cross-Straits economic integration, which could get a shot in the arm from the mainland's "new (economic) normal" and the 13th Five-Year Plan (2016-20). In other words, Taiwan's new leadership has to abide by the 1992 Consensus and value its contributions to the island's development if it truly seeks to expand its presence in the mainland market and regional economic cooperation.

Objectively speaking, the constantly improving cross-Straits ties have everything to do with both sides upholding and deepening the consensus. The mainland is willing and has the capability to improve Taiwan compatriots' well-being, which it sees as part of its responsibility, but only on the basis of shared respect for the 1992 Consensus that lays the political foundation of cross-Strait relations.

The author is a professor at the Institute of Taiwan Studies, Beijing Union University.

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