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Taiwan’s GDP Skyrockets to Fastest Quarterly Growth Since 1987, Fueled by Insatiable AI Demand

Taiwan’s GDP Skyrockets to Fastest Quarterly Growth Since 1987, Fueled by Insatiable AI Demand

Published:
2026-01-30 15:39:11
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Taiwan posts fastest quarterly GDP growth since 1987 on AI demand

AI isn't just changing the world—it's turbocharging entire economies. Taiwan's latest GDP figures just delivered the proof.

The Hardware Behind the Hype

Forget software chatbots. The real money is in the silicon. The island's semiconductor foundries, the undisputed backbone of the global tech supply chain, are running at full throttle. Every advanced AI model, from corporate data centers to next-gen consumer devices, needs their chips. That demand isn't a spike; it's a seismic, structural shift.

A Supply Chain Superpower

This isn't just about one company or one product line. It's about controlling the critical path. From wafer fabrication to advanced packaging, Taiwan's ecosystem has become the irreplaceable nexus. When the world wants to build AI, it writes a check to Taiwan first. The quarterly growth numbers—the fastest in nearly four decades—are merely the financial echo of that reality.

The New Economic Engine

Move over, traditional exports. The AI-driven semiconductor boom is now the primary growth engine, reshaping trade balances and geopolitical calculations overnight. It turns out that manufacturing the physical brains for the digital age is a spectacularly good business—even if your average Wall Street analyst still can't tell a GPU from a GDP.

The takeaway? While pundits debate AI's hypothetical future, Taiwan's factories are busy printing its very real, very profitable present. The chips are down, and they're winning.

Several financial institutions increase their predictions amid Taiwan’s impressive results 

In Taiwan, individuals have shown heightened interest in AI technologies, embracing them in their daily operations. Following this increased adoption of the technology, analysts anticipated that AI WOULD play a significant role in Taiwan’s economic growth this year. 

This assertion prompted several financial institutions to raise their 2026 forecasts above the central bank’s 3.67% projection.  For instance, the Goldman Sachs Group Inc., a leading global financial institution, recently released a statement notifying the public of updates to its prediction, which had ranged from 4.4% to 5.1%.

To further demonstrate increased confidence in the ongoing rapid, widespread adoption of AI, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. announced its intention to set aside up to $56 billion this month to fund capital spending this year, exceeding expectations.

Apart from this plan, the most valuable company in Asia also expects nearly 30% revenue growth in 2026. This percentage surpassed Wall Street forecasts.

Seeing the positive sentiment around the country’s economic progress, sources sought to explain that the Optimism is partly driven by the latest US-Taiwan trade agreement. Under this agreement, the tariff rate on products from Taiwan was reduced from 20% to 15%. Moreover, companies in the country were granted permission to make substantial investments and finance up to $500 billion in American operations. 

Just after this announcement was published, the statistics bureau reported that private consumption ROSE by 3.43% in the fourth quarter compared to a year ago, hence, representing the quickest expansion since the second quarter of 2024. In the face of a struggling consumer market, Taiwan allocated around NT$10,000 ($318) per citizen to boost the market.

Analysts predict that the CBC will maintain the policy rate at 2% this year 

In a statement, Michelle Lam, an economist at Societe Generale SA for Greater China, pointed out that, “the rise in household spending was even better than we expected, thanks to the government’s cash payments.” 

Following her remarks, several analysts expressed confidence that robust economic growth will persist. This growth is expected to enable the Central Bank of the Republic of China to sustain current interest rates beyond earlier projections.

Experts from Taiwan expect the CBC to maintain the policy rate at 2% in 2026 rather than implementing cuts in early this year as previously estimated. Meanwhile, reports mentioned that the export sector achieved peak levels in 2025. 

More than 60% of these shipments consisted of Taiwan’s advanced chips, which were exempt from US duties while the US administration examined imports of various critical products.

The country’s trade surplus with the United States also peaked at an all-time high of $150.1 billion this year, significantly exceeding last year’s $64.7 billion, more than doubling it.

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