Taiwan’s Economy Set for 15-Year High Growth on AI Boom
Taiwan has dramatically revised its 2025 economic growth forecast to 7.37%, marking what would be the island’s highest growth rate in 15 years. The Directorate-General of Budget, Accounting and Statistics (DGBAS) announced the sharp upward revision, attributing it primarily to soaring global demand for artificial intelligence technologies.
Key Takeaways
- 2025 growth forecast revised from 4.45% to 7.37% – a 2.92 percentage point increase
- Would be Taiwan’s strongest growth since 2010’s 10.25%
- 2026 projected at 3.54% as AI momentum continues
- Exports expected to reach $664.4 billion next year
AI Demand Driving Economic Surge
The DGBAS’s latest projection reflects significant upward revisions across exports, imports, private consumption, and private investment. Tsai Yu-tai, head of the DGBAS’s Department of Statistics, confirmed that global demand for AI-related goods is the primary driver behind the improved outlook.
Merchandise exports are now expected to reach $624.9 billion this year and $664.4 billion next year – increases of $35.7 billion and $62.3 billion respectively from previous projections.
Domestic Stimulus Measures
The government’s NT$10,000 (US$317) cash handout program, which began earlier this month, is expected to significantly boost domestic consumption. Over 15 million people have already received the payment, with its impact projected to contribute about one percentage point to Q4 2024’s 7.91% growth.
Private consumption is now forecast to grow 1.5% in real terms for 2025, up 0.65 percentage points from the previous estimate.
Conservative 2026 Outlook
Despite the strong 2025 projection, the DGBAS described its 2026 forecast of 3.54% as “conservative.” This caution reflects potential U.S. tariffs or trade restrictions on semiconductors under the ongoing Section 232 investigation.
Expert Reactions
Economic experts expressed little surprise at the upward revision. Li Chen-yu, chief economist at Taishin Shin Kong Financial, noted his firm had internally raised its growth forecast above 7% earlier in November.
“The current economy is rising steadily,” said DGBAS Minister Chen Shu-tzu.
Sun Ming-te, director of the Taiwan Institute of Economic Research’s Macroeconomic Forecasting Center, cited strong AI sales as the main driver and expected 2026 domestic demand to exceed this year’s levels, supported by monetary easing and potential US Fed rate cuts.
Risk Factors
Experts cautioned that several uncertainties remain, including potential shifts in US trade policies, AI investment overheating, and new tariffs under the Section 232 investigation. However, China’s efforts to curb excessive competition in traditional industries could help ease pressures on Taiwan’s supply chains.



