Quantcast

DCSIMG
May 24, 5:46 AM EDT

Taiwan cuts growth forecast on muted export demand

Technology Video
Buy AP Photo Reprints
Interactives
Taiwan's Festival of Prosperity
Taiwanese Ghost Month
Multimedia
A district summary of the Beige Book
Measuring economic stress by county nationwide
Mall malaise: shoppers browse, but don't buy
Unemployment by the numbers
Family struggles with father's unemployment
Saying an affordable goodbye
Hard times hit small car dealer
Latest Economic News
Stocks head lower, market on track for weekly loss

Stocks head lower, market headed for a weekly loss

Stocks open lower, market headed for a weekly loss

Futures slide; markets appear headed for down week

Taiwan cuts growth forecast on muted export demand

German business confidence unexpectedly rebounds

Japan's PM Abe defends policies as markets settle

Why worry? Less aid by Fed would point to recovery

Summary Box: Stocks recover from an early swoon

How the Dow Jones industrial average fared

Interactives
Greece's Debt Threatens to Spread
State budget
gaps map
Auto industry problems trickle down, punish Tennessee county
Women give old Derby hats a makeover in tough economy
S.C. town deals with highest unemployment in South
How mortgages were bundled and sold as securities
Tracking the $700 billion financial bailout
Tracking the year's job losses
State-by-state foreclosures since 2007
Credit crisis explained
Presidents and their economic legacies
Lexicon of the financial crisis
Americans' addiction to debt
Related Stories
Restaurant learns online reviews can make or break

TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) -- Taiwan has lowered its economic growth forecast for 2013 to a muted 2.4 percent as global demand for the island's electronics exports remained subdued.

In February, the government predicted 3.6 percent growth this year. The economy grew 1.3 percent in 2012.

The government said Friday the economy expanded 1.7 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier.

A slow recovery in China and recession in Europe have hurt exports, the engine of the island's economic growth.

Some export orders for high-tech goods shifted to Japan because of the weaker yen.

Robust growth in semiconductor exports has led to an upsurge in machinery imports for factory expansion. But car imports have dropped as consumers held up purchases of Japan-made vehicles in anticipation the yen would weaken further.

© 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.