工作日誌:Taipei Times的訪問報導
ANALYSIS:
Broken promises push down Ma’s approval rating
By Mo
Yan-chih / Staff reporter
President Ma
Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) approval
rating has dropped to 20 percent on the fifth anniversary of his first
inauguration on May 20, 2008.
Critics say
false promises of economic revival, flip-flop policies and concerns about his
administration’s cozy relations with
Having won
re-election last year with 51.6 percent of the vote, Ma has failed to achieve
the “6-3-3” economic goals proposed for his first term, namely 6 percent
economic growth, per capita GDP of US$30,000 and unemployment of less than 3
percent.
A proposed
capital gains tax on securities investments will be revised to remove the
8,500-point imposition threshold for most individual investors, while pension
reforms and the controversial construction of the Fourth Nuclear Power Plant
New Taipei City’s (新北市) Gongliao
District (貢寮) have
widened political divides and stirred social unrest, fueling public distrust of
the government.
Ma has taken
pride in the development of cross-strait relations over the past five years,
including the signing of the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA)
with
However,
concerns about
“Ma has lost
much of his credibility over broken campaign promises and policy changes. His
record-low approval rating reflects the public’s frustration with his
second-term performance and it is unlikely he will be able to restore public
trust in the near future,” said Ming Chuan University professor Chen Chao-chien
(陳朝建).
In a poll
released earlier this month by Taiwan Thinktank, a non-profit public policy
research organization, Ma’s approval rating dropped to a record-low 19.1
percent, with 60 percent of respondents saying they do not expect Ma’s
performance to improve during the rest of his second term.
A poll
released last week by the Chinese-language United Daily News showed similar
results, with Ma’s approval rating dropping to 21 percent from 23 percent at
the end of his first term.
The figure
was in sharp contrast with an average approval rate of between 60 percent and
70 percent following his first inauguration in 2008.
Chen said the
prolonged economic slowdown and the government’s lack of resolution in pushing
through reforms are key factors behind the strong public backlash.
For example,
the decision to lower the threshold for the proposed capital gains tax reform,
which was only introduced last year, reflected the problematic policy-making
process of the Ma administration, he said. Disputes in the legislature over the
bill have also caused delays to reviews of other measures, he said.
“Many of the
government’s policies were steered by populism, but such flip-flopping will not
save Ma from low approval ratings,” Chen said.
According to
the Directorate-General of Budget, Accounting and Statistics, economic growth
in the first quarter of the year was 1.54 percent, barely half of the 3.26
percent growth predicted by the agency in February.
The
government expects the ECFA to promote
Tung Li-wen (董立文) an associate professor
of the Graduate School of Public Security at Central Police University and a
Taiwan Thinktank consultant, said the 18 cross-strait agreements have not
helped boost the employment rate or increase GDP, and the Ma administration should
shoulder the blame for its inability to put agreements into practice while also
being too dependent on China.
“Whether the
cross-strait agreements are actually viable and will benefit
While Ma said
his administration will continue to focus on economic cooperation with
“
Political
analyst Liao Da-chi (廖達琪) said the
government should make greater efforts on regional peace and enhance
interactions with other nations to strengthen the nation’s diplomatic
relations.
Chen said the
recent dispute with the
However,
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