An automotive factory; Photo by BisgovUK 
            Proposal 
            We hereby propose that the government  provide a legal framework for the establishment of industry self-governance in  Taiwan, structured similarly to the Building  Administration Division of the Condominium Administration Act, under the  supervision of the Ministry of Economic Affairs. This is to allow for the  establishment of standards for each industry sector and for industry sectors to  establish self-governing industry committees, which would incorporate the unions,  industry associations and consumer protection agencies currently in place.  
            Industry and Industry Governance 
            Every industry can be divided into buyers  and sellers in terms of transactions, and sellers can then subsequently be  divided into employers and employees. In each industry, buyers and sellers, and  employers and employees do not necessarily prioritize the same things; employers  care about the bottom line, whereas employees are most concerned with salary  and welfare, while consumers value product or service quality and price. These  three parties, employees, employers and consumers all have a shared interest in  the continued functioning of industry, although their interests have to be  balanced against each other. Conflict between any two parties will also affect  the third party, so any regulatory measures adopted in that industry have to  take account of the interests of and be accepted by all three parties. 
            Industry governance comes down to  management. As each industry can be said to comprise three equal interest  groups, employers, employees and consumers, only through the participation of  all individuals or members that make up these groups in industry governance can  they enjoy the rights and fulfill the responsibilities of industry governance;  those that do not participate should be forced out of the market or should not  receive the protections and benefits afforded by industry self-governance.  After the launch of industry self-governance, all members of the industry  associations, unions and consumer protection associations currently in place  should join the industry governance committee as employers, employees or  consumers, with each separate member pool putting forth committee members to  engage in industry governance.  
            The objective of industry governance is to  establish a good environment for industry operations and development, to allow  for negotiation between the rights and interests of employers, employees and  consumers to ensure that all three parties can derive benefits from industry,  as well as having their interests safeguarded. Each industry governing committee  should cooperate and support each other in achieving the objectives of national  industrial development, including achieving the following objectives:  
              (1) Ensuring national research and  development funding and educational investment is able to meet the demands of  every industry, as well as providing core technology for industry development  and cultivating industry talent;  
              (2) Establishing a comprehensive industry  infrastructure in which smaller players are supported by bigger players, to  enable more synergy in industry development;  
              (3) Adopting more positive market  management measures to lower the risks of advanced investment and public investment,  and allocating and sharing public industry investment fairly;  
              (4) Establishing a joint mechanism for the  entire industry aimed at resolving the problems that come along with the  advance of technology, such as equipment upgrade and reduction of workforce, in  the development of each industry, allowing employers in each industry to reduce  the financial and technological risks of investment in equipment upgrades and  jointly resolving issues such as further educational opportunities for staff  laid off as a result of the reduction of the workforce in response to the shift  to automation in industries across all industries, so that operating risks for  the employer or collective protests by employees won’t stall the structural  advance of industries. 
            Figure 1: The industry governance committees would  comprise representatives of employers,  employees and consumers 
               
            Structural Composition of Industry  Governance Committees and Expenditure 
            After delimiting industry classifications,  the employers, employees and consumers which are entitled to membership should  then be delineated. The industry membership pool should then immediately  register with the Ministry of Economic Affairs to allow the formation of a  self-governing committee. Each industry should be limited to establishing one  industry self-governance committee invested with public power, and those  members that qualify as either of the three parties should register with the  industry governance committee and after confirming that they meet the  requirements, they can become a voting member. Under the industry governance  committee three sub-committees should be formed: the employer subcommittee, the  employees subcommittee and the consumer subcommittee, made up of a limited  number of committee members selected respectively by employers, employees and  consumers. The number of committee members from each party on the governance committee  should be set according to demand. Each of the chairs of the subcommittees will  be voted by the entire subcommittee. All committee members should have a tenure  of four years, the same as the elections for legislators, and the elections  should be held simultaneously with the legislative elections. The industry self-governance  committee will have a chairperson and two deputy chairs. The chair of the  employer subcommittee will initially serve as the chair of the industry  self-governance committee, and the chairs of the employee and consumer  subcommittees will serve as the deputy chairs of the industry self-governance  committee. The employer, employee and consumer subcommittees can all establish  standing advisory units, and hire professionals or service providers as support  for the chair, the deputy chair and the committees. The costs incurred by the  industry governance committees will be paid through business tax on  transactions by companies within the industry. 
            Industry Membership Structure and  Voting Rights 
            The voting rights of the employer, employee  and consumer groups can be set according to the unique characteristics of the  industry. To give an example, the influence of a member (natural person or  corporation) of the employers committee can be decided based on the amount of  business tax they pay in the four years running up to the election. The  proportion of business tax paid by each member of the employers’ committee can  serve as the proportion of their voting rights. The employee committee voting  rights, however, will be calculated on the basis of one-person-one-vote for  full-time employees. The consumer members’ votes can be calculated on the basis  of total business tax paid in the four years running up to the election. The  total business tax paid by consumers constitutes the proportion of their  overall voting power. Within industry, individuals who run their own businesses  can register and vote for both the employer and employee subcommittees, but  they must accept direction from both the employee and employer subcommittees.   
            Regulations and Resolutions for the  Three Subcommittees 
            The three subcommittees under the industry self-governance  committee can impose management mechanisms governing the routine of daily  affairs as they see fit: in terms of routine management mechanisms, the management  committees can decide by a majority vote; as to compulsory management  regulations, rules and the model governing the management mechanisms and human  resources management rules, they must be passed in advance by vote, and can  only take effect after a vote by all members. As well as different rules for  the different kinds of votes, there should be an anonymous majority vote. 
            Institution, Regulations and Ordinary  Resolutions for the Industry Self-Governance Committee 
            If two or more parties among the three subcommittees  under the industry self-governance committee back the same proposal, it should  all be handed over to the main committee for debate and deliberation, this  central committee will be comprised of the committee members of all three  subcommittees, with a rotating chair, cycling through each of the subcommittee  chairs. Non-imperative resolutions for the governance committee can be voted on  separately by the three subcommittees, the total votes in each of the subcommittees  must be above half of the number of members in attendance to pass. With  imperative resolutions or changes to or the creation of new rules, after a vote  by the central committees, it must be voted on by the entirety of the  membership of the three parties, and will only take effect when it passes all  three votes. It will then be enforced by the industry self-governance  committee. The rules and resolutions of the three subcommittees should not  contradict or conflict with those of the industry self-governance committee,  and the rules and resolutions of the industry self-governance committee should  not conflict with or contradict national laws. 
            Suggestions for the Executive and  Legislative Branches of Government 
            
              - We propose that the executive and legislative branches of government  carry out research into legal frameworks, organizational management and funding  for industry self-governance, and then establish a legal framework for industry  self-governance that industry can abide by with reference to the Condominium  Administration Act Building Administration Division, to allow industries  nationwide to build an organizational structure to allow for the realization of  industry self-governance.
 
              - When industry self-governance is rolled out, we suggest that  industry associations, unions and consumer protection groups cooperate to make  plans based on industry management needs, and build rules and management  structures appropriate to industry self-governance, as well as reexamining any  existing legislation or government agencies or institutions that do not meet  the demand of the contemporary world, then propose suggested amendments to existing  government regulations and organization to the Legislative Yuan, to allow  industry governance to shift from the current government structure to the autonomous  industry self-governance committees. 
 
              - After completing the establishment of the framework for industry self-governance,  as well as adjusting government regulations and organization, we suggest the  Legislative Yuan start to plan the privatization of all national industries and  government public services, putting all national industries and government  public service departments under the purview of the private industry  self-governance system, with each industry self-governance committee taking  responsibility for the relevant government departments, using regular open  calls for tenders to provide and supervise public services previously provided  by the government, and the government departments should ensure that they  thoroughly divest themselves of all shareholdings, with the result that no  government executive agency or the Legislative Yuan will have any control over  industry or the provision of any service.
 
              - After completing the establishment of the legal and organizational  framework for industry self-governance, we suggest the government privatize the  education system and publicly-run research institutes, to form educational  services and research services industries, to allow these two industries to  fully cooperate with other private industries, and to free them from the  control and management of government executive organs (the Ministry of  Education and the Ministry of Science and Technology), as well as the  Legislative Yuan, allowing members of these two industries to be able to  operate and innovate under a corporate model, to work and collaborate with  other private industries freely, aligning them with local and international  markets. 
 
              - We suggest that the government educational budget be diverted to the  Ministry of the Interior, and educational vouchers should be apportioned each  year based on the total income of the families of every school-age students, to  ensure that all school-age students and their parents nationwide can choose  educational services appropriate to their own or their child’s individual needs  from privately-run educational services providers.
 
              - We suggest that all science and technology-related research and  development and industry development government outgoings are redirected to all  the industry self-governance committees to establish a common management  framework which would allow research and development and industry development costs  to really meet the demands of industry and allow privately-run research and  development services to provide the core technology and talent needed by each  industry sector, and for industry development funds to go towards these areas,  as required by industry.
 
             
            Conclusion 
            The guiding principle of constitutional democracy is that the people  should govern themselves, implementing constitutional democracy in industrial governance  should take the form of industry self-governance. A democratic government shouldn’t  use society’s or labourers’ negative impression of businesses or business  people to take away the right of self-governance for Taiwan’s industrial  sectors, in fact, Taiwan’s business leaders in the past have often offered  advice and assistance to government policymakers, serving as an important  source of counsel for policymakers. Economic governance is the core of national  governance, and without an exceptional economic base, one can’t take on infrastructure;  many business leaders have exceptional business management experience and an  international perspective. If business leaders are excluded from a country’s  economic governance, this would be disastrous for the nation, however, this is  the current state of affairs in Taiwan. Currently the governance of industry is  led by government bureaucrats across various government departments. For  example, the patent industry is governed by the Taiwan Intellectual Property  Office, whereas the tourism and tour bus industries are governed by the  Ministry of Transport. As many of the elected officials and representatives  lack industry backgrounds and experience, they hand over the governance of the  industry to government administrative departments. As  bureaucrats are mostly selected through civil service examinations and they  essentially have an iron rice bowl, with job security for life, they tend  towards conservatism and generally have no industry experience, so for their  own interests, they aren’t willing to have too much interaction with  industry or put legal frameworks into effect. This means bureaucrats are  unlikely to resolve industry problems or overturn deep-rooted practices for  improvements. In addition, bureaucrats promote the interests of their own  department over others and protectionism is a serious problem, very few are  willing to engage in cross-departmental communication or coordination, preferring  rather to protect their own department’s jobs or funding allocation. They are  unwilling to change the status quo of industry management, therefore industries  find themselves running into walls when trying to establish new systems or when  in search of breakthroughs in terms of outdated legislation or management  systems, leaving industry with its hands and feet tethered in quickly  developing industries. In an era where the world economy and technology are  advancing rapidly, domestic regulations and limits imposed by the bureaucracy  mean that Taiwan is unable to keep up with the global market and global  economic development. 
            The essence of democratic politics is governance by the people;  officials are elected by the people to lead government departments in providing  services to the people, and representatives are elected to supervise how those  government departments implement policy. However, this system of representation  is found to be severely lacking in terms of governance of the national economy,  that is, government officials and representatives lack industry knowledge or management experience in the various industries, so they have no way to grasp  the complex core technical issues in each industry to address them effectively.  This results in them handing this task over to unelected bureaucrats. In the national governance of industries, the representative politics that one might expect of a constitutional democracy do not exist, and all the power of elected officials and  representatives to govern industry has been been handed over to government administrative staff and bureaucrats, which gives government bureaucrats the  power of life and death over private enterprise, such as regulation  formulation, policy promotion and law enforcement, which bizarrely makes them  the leaders of industry.  
            The governance of industry, therefore, employs a distorted form of  outsourcing: employers, employees and consumers are all citizens or natural  persons of the nation, so their power should be protected by the constitution,  but they are given very little say on industry governance or power over policy  on neighboring industries. These are “economic rights”. Every member of every  industry should lobby the government and the Legislative Yuan either in an  individual capacity or through their industry association, their union, or  consumer protection association, and only then will there be a possibility of a  legislator or a government official taking notice. Most of the time, however,  these efforts come to nothing, and industry problems continue to fester. 
            We should, therefore, push for the formation of autonomous industry  organizations to allow for industry self-governance, to realize the economic  rights of industry participants in line with constitutional democracy. The best  system for industry governance is joint governance by employers, employees and  consumers, establishing three-party committees to manage employers, employees  and consumers, and with committee members from each subcommittee forming an  industry self-governance committee to jointly lead industrial development and  to create a wider environment for industrial development. We believe that this  new industry self-governance structure can meet the needs of Taiwan’s  industries as they exist today, to allow all Taiwanese industries to be in control  of their own destiny and future path, in the face of the complex trends and  challenges domestically, across the Taiwan Strait and worldwide. 
              
            
              
                
                  
                      
                        
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                                  | Author: | 
                                  Winston Hsu | 
                                 
                                
                                  | Current Post: | 
                                  CEO, North America Intellectual Property Corporation | 
                                 
                                
                                  | Education: | 
                                  MSc Computer Science, University of Iowa | 
                                 
                                
                                  | Experience: | 
                                  US Patent Agent; 
                                    Member of Intellectual Property Committee of the Chinese National Federation of Industries (ROC)  | 
                                 
                              
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