Business | General
China to offer mainland opportunities to Taiwan
Entertainment sector can take advantage of better cross-Strait links amid slowing domestic market
Taipei: China's government plans to allow Taiwanese to set up and run entertainment businesses on the mainland, according to an official at talks between the two sides.
China is seeking to boost Taiwan's entertainment industry by allowing greater access to the mainland market, the official Xinhua News Agency cited Minister for Culture Cai Wu as saying on Saturday.
Taiwan's cultural sectors, including broadcasting, news publishing and music, could take advantage of better cross-Strait links amid a slowing domestic market, Wu Poh-hsiung, chairman of Taiwan's ruling Kuomintang party, said earlier.
Wu and Cai are in Changsha, central China, as delegates to the fifth annual cross-Strait talks, which have helped ease almost 60 years of tensions.
Relations have improved since Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeou took office last year, pledging better ties with the mainland, its largest trading partner and biggest military and political threat.
The two-day summit, which ended yesterday, is focusing on development of cultural and educational links between Taiwan and China.
Taiwanese will be allowed to run performance venues in China through ventures with local companies or by funding venues themselves, Cai was cited as saying.
Taiwanese entertainment brokerages will also be allowed to set up branches on the mainland, the minister said.
China also plans to allow Taiwanese cable-television networks to provide information services in Fujian Province, Tian Jin, deputy director of the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television was cited as saying.
Taiwan and China have been ruled separately since Chiang Kai-shek's Kuomintang, or Nationalists, fled to the island after being defeated by Mao Zedong's Communists in 1949. China regards Taiwan as part of its territory and has threatened to use force if necessary to reclaim it.
More from Business General
More from Business
Business Editor's choice
-
Do unemployment figures flatter to deceive?
Jobseekers and recruiters give out mixed signals ranging from optimism to downright despair even as official data show recovery
-
Banks can increase their share
Longer opening hours, more locations outside cities and lower charges can help
-
Geepas idea blossomed in Dubai
The journey led from a small shop in Bahrain to a $1.27b company in the UAE


