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Taipei Times


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# Article Title Author Hits
721 Terrorism with CCP characteristics Lindell Lucy 511
722 Are war clouds on the horizon? Ian Easton 417
723 Taiwan can still help with vaccines Fernando Herrera Ramos 364
724 Vaccination program preparations Tommy Lin 林逸民 331
725 Wuhan lab leak tip of iceberg Taipei Times Editorial 345
726 Time to rethink trash collection Taipei Times Editorial 387
727 Witch hunts hindering contact tracing Lin Shu-heng 林書珩 359
728 Taiwan must choose war or peace Simon Tang 湯先鈍 351
729 Vaccines vital to national security Joly Lin 林喬立 397
730 Securing a worldwide COVID-19 recovery Jenny Bloomfield 露珍怡 365
731 CCP’s vaccine propaganda drive Taipei Times Editorial 380
732 Biden must have a clear message Joseph Bosco 348
733 Stabilizing power by dispersing risk Taipei Times Editorial 413
734 Taiwan and the ghosts of history Ian Buruma 353
735 Taiwan can help; so should India Sana Hashmi 409
736 Addressing the PLA’s new tactics Lu Li-shih 呂禮詩 464
737 Ma keeps on parroting Beijing’s propaganda Liou Je-wei 劉哲瑋 355
738 Warning issued after 7 new local cases Taipei Times 352
739 Little coverage on Taiwan in West Ashley Rindsberg 379
740 Nuclear plants a big security risk Henry Sokolski 345
 
Page 37 of 145

Newsflash

Taipei City and the four special municipalities that came into being on Saturday could turn into a disaster for the central and local governments if underlying financial problems are not properly addressed, experts told a forum on the financial aspects of the five megacities yesterday.

Peng Pai-hsien (彭百顯), a professor of finance at Kainan University, told a panel organized by the Taiwan Brain Trust think tank in Taipei that the five special municipalities face an immediate shortfall of NT$718.5 billion (US$24.27 billion) — which would climb to NT$803.4 billion if potential debt were counted — while the central government was faring no better, with a potential debt of NT$21 trillion.