I think there are two pillars in Taiwan supporting Taiwan's continuous development: economic development and national development as a whole. This is about our economic growth. Robust economic growth is very important to Taiwan, because that will support us to better build our self-defence capabilities. This is why we emphasize so much that the FIPA between our two countries, and the CPTPP among the trans-Pacific partners, would be very important for Taiwan. We have been working pretty much on our own to develop robust economic growth, but we are coming into a new age where doing it on our own will be more and more difficult. We need to work with partners, especially like-minded partners.
The FIPA, which stands for “foreign investment promotion and protection agreement”, is, in a way, a free trade agreement under a different name. It's very clearly important for us. This is self-evident. There's also the CPTPP. We applied to join the CPTPP in September of last year. This has a high standard for a trading bloc, higher than that set by the World Trade Organization—