China's New Incentives for Taiwan Met with Caution Amidst Political Tensions and Election Concerns

April 13, 2026
China's New Incentives for Taiwan Met with Caution Amidst Political Tensions and Election Concerns
  • China has previously rejected dialogue with Taiwan’s administration, keeping cross-strait engagement difficult amid ongoing political tensions and concerns about past election interference.

  • Beijing continues to refuse direct talks with Taiwan’s president and maintains the separatist label, while the Kuomintang welcomes overtures and calls for engagement based on equality, dignity, and mutual respect.

  • There was no immediate official comment from the Taiwan Affairs Office regarding Beijing’s proposals.

  • Taiwan’s National Security Bureau chief Tsai Ming-yen says the looser trade and tourism measures should be managed by the Taiwanese government to assess risk and avoid long-term consequences.

  • Tsai Ming-yen stresses government-led planning to guide exchanges with China and mitigate risks, rather than relying on private party-to-party talks.

  • China unveiled ten incentive measures for Taiwan, including easing tourist limits, allowing some TV dramas, and facilitating food sales, in response to a visit by Taiwan’s opposition leader, while reiterating that Beijing will not hold talks with President Lai Ching-te’s administration, whom it labels a separatist.

  • Taiwan’s Taiwan Affairs Office did not comment on the new measures at press time.

  • A security official argues that the government should lead engagement with China to better assess risks and coordinate exchanges amid Beijing’s new measures.

  • Tsai notes that China has historically used goodwill measures to influence Taiwan elections, as seen ahead of past elections, including local elections in November.

  • Taiwan is preparing for key local elections, with concerns about China attempting to sway voters through trade measures seen in prior campaigns.

  • China’s goodwill measures have historically targeted specific counties, cities, companies, industries, or individuals to interfere in Taiwan’s elections, according to Taiwan’s security assessments.

  • Taiwan reiterates that only its people can decide Taiwan’s future and rejects Beijing’s territorial claims, a stance shared across government branches amid rising cross-strait tensions.

Summary based on 5 sources


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