Electronic Component Demand in Taiwan Remains Robust Despite the Largest Fall of Automotive Parts

Fantasy circuit board. Top view. 3d illustration

Taiwan’s industrial production increased 3.51 percent year-on-year last month, the third consecutive month of annual growth despite the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to Taipei Times.

Despite the overall 3.51 percent increase, the automobile and auto parts sector in Taiwan posted its largest year-on-year decline since the 2009 global crisis

Output from the manufacturing sector, which makes up more than 90 percent of industrial output, expanded by 4.15 percent, largely due to demand for electronic components, the data showed.

“Demand for electronic components remains robust due to new technologies and services, such as 5G, the Internet of Things, cloud computing and high-performance computing,” Department of Statistics Director-General Wang Shu-chuan (王淑娟) told a news conference in Taipei.

Demand for servers, laptops, and network and communications devices has continued to surge as people increasingly work and study from home during lockdowns worldwide, Wang said, adding that the production of LCD panels and related parts also increased, ending 17 consecutive months of annual declines.

After production of integrated circuits and LCD panels grew 32.27 percent and 3.49 percent respectively, total output of the electronic components industry increased 22.15 percent year-on-year, the data showed.

Meanwhile, production in the computer, electronics and optical components industry — which increased early last year due to firms relocating back to Taiwan and transferred orders due to the US-China trade dispute — increased by 1.75 percent year-on-year.

Attributing the small increase to a high comparison base, Wang said a decline in the production of camera lenses for mobile devices dimmed the sector’s performance.

“[Although] local firms increased output thanks to growing orders on the back of demand for electronics … the pandemic has dampened demand for smartphones,” she said.

The output of the base metals and machinery equipment sectors fell 6.08 percent and 14.1 percent respectively due to bearish market sentiment fostered by the spread of the coronavirus.

The automobile and auto parts sector posted its largest year-on-year decline since the global financial crisis in 2009, 21.1 percent, which Wang blamed on customers postponing purchases of new vehicles due to the lockdowns, as well as supply chain disruptions in the mechanical parts industry.

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