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After a year-long trade war between the United States and China, Chinese furniture manufacturers have been subject to higher tariffs, and the unprecedented coronavirus pandemic has made the situation worse. The separatist DPP authorities on the island continue to instigate 'decoupling' from the mainland, while Taiwanese companies are moving in the opposite direction driven by the 'natural selection' of market demand. Electronic stamping parts are not easy to replicate. From supplying raw materials to processing electronic parts, factories in this southern city can produce almost everything, sometimes even unimaginable things. Zhang Yanping, an employee of Kinyet, said in an interview with the Global Times on Monday: “You can’t imagine what you can do with these iron bars.” The factory produces various parts and components in electronic equipment used in laptops, cars, printers and other machines. Components. She said: “Even if it’s the iPhone’s camera parts, you will find the metal parts we make.” Lu Yongchang, President of Kinyet, an integrated industrial chain, started doing business in the mainland in 1992 and brought companies from Taiwan to Dongguan. New skills and new ideas in management. Liu believes that Tsai Ing-wen-wen, chairman of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), has continued to work hard to encourage economic decoupling to reduce dependence on the mainland, and encourage companies to return to the island or relocate to other parts of Asia. This is empty politics. committed to. 'Establishing technology-intensive factories in other countries (such as stamping parts factories) is different from establishing assembly line factories. [My factory] requires a large number of workers and specialized training, and [relocation] brings many challenges, including language barriers.' Lu Said in an interview with 'Global Times' on Monday. After years of development, China's industrial chain is now centralized and integrated. In contrast, in recent years, industrial chains have only begun to form and develop in Southeast Asian countries such as Vietnam. Taiwanese entrepreneurs say that many companies moving to these countries still have to buy some parts from China, which increases costs. 'Don't even mention going back to Taiwan. Where can we get enough land? Will there be support facilities and it is easy to find suppliers from upstream and downstream?' Lu asked. 'Don't believe in political rhetoric and see what the reality is.' The huge market and prospects. Recent economic data supports Lu's statement, especially since the mainland is the first country to resume production after the coronavirus. The accelerated economic recovery has rekindled hope for Taiwanese companies. Official data show that in the first half of 2020, Taiwanese companies’ investment in the mainland increased by 52% year-on-year to US$3.17 billion. However, the deterioration of cross-strait political relations still poses obstacles to businessmen like Lu and Chen. They believe that the DPP authorities require 14-day quarantine measures for those returning from the mainland, and the few flights between mainland and Taiwan are considered 'Political exercises'. Designed to restrict business. Lu said: 'Another 14-day compulsory quarantine measure is aimed at those who have flown back to Taiwan from the mainland where the epidemic is fully controlled, causing a lot of inconvenience to business activities.' Second is the Taiwan issue, which has exacerbated the Taiwan Strait. The danger of war. Taiwanese businessmen mainly living in the mainland hope for peaceful reunification, and in the past few decades, cross-strait relations have experienced ups and downs. Chen said: 'Looking back at history, even though we have been different for more than 70 years, we have been using the same language for more than 5,000 years and we have the same cultural background.' Both sides should face increasing hostility.