Taiwan’s export sector closed last year on a high note, with the Ministry of Finance reporting that last month’s shipments rose at the second-highest pace on record. The strong finish capped a year in which Taiwan’s export machine was pulled decisively by demand for artificial intelligence (AI) hardware and advanced computing, underscoring how the country’s technology ecosystem has become a central supplier in the latest round of global data center and high performance computing investment.
The ministry said that exports surged 43.4 percent from a year earlier last month as demand for artificial intelligence (AI) hardware and advanced computing remained strong, the Ministry of Finance said yesterday. The report described overall exports as delivering a “blockbuster” performance for the year, with shipments of chips, servers and related components benefiting most from the wave of spending by cloud operators and enterprises upgrading infrastructure to support generative artificial intelligence and other compute-intensive workloads.
Officials framed the results as “precedented times” rather than a surprise, noting that artificial intelligence and tech exports drove a banner for exports last year as Taiwan’s economic growth experienced a flood tide. The data highlighted how concentrated growth has become in segments tied to artificial intelligence hardware and advanced computing, even as other trade categories were less dynamic. The ministry’s update suggested that sustaining this momentum will depend on whether global technology companies continue to expand investments in artificial intelligence, and whether Taiwan’s exporters can maintain their competitive edge in high end manufacturing amid shifting trade and tariff risks.
