• About us
  • Team
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
Tuesday, June 30, 2026
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
World's first weekly chronicle of development news
  • Blitz Highlights
    • Special
    • Spotlight
    • Insight
    • Entertainment
    • Sports
  • Opinion
  • Legal
  • Perspective
  • Nation
    • East
    • West
    • North
    • South
  • Business & Economy
  • World
  • Hindi Edition
  • International Editions
    • Dubai
    • Tanzania
    • United Kingdom
    • USA
  • Blitz India Business
  • Blitz Highlights
    • Special
    • Spotlight
    • Insight
    • Entertainment
    • Sports
  • Opinion
  • Legal
  • Perspective
  • Nation
    • East
    • West
    • North
    • South
  • Business & Economy
  • World
  • Hindi Edition
  • International Editions
    • Dubai
    • Tanzania
    • United Kingdom
    • USA
  • Blitz India Business
No Result
View All Result
World's first weekly chronicle of development news
No Result
View All Result

Taiwan spectre

Even a limited conflict may cause major global disruption

by Blitz India Media
June 9, 2026
in Insight
0
Why a Taiwan Crisis Threatens the Entire Global Economy

Sukumar Sah

NEW DELHI: The world today is far more economically vulnerable to a Taiwan crisis than it was to the Russia-Ukraine war. Ukraine disrupted food, fertiliser and energy markets; Taiwan has the potential to paralyse the technological nervous system of the global economy itself. Persistent tensions between the United States and China over the self-governed island raise the question not whether the issue is serious, but whether governments and markets fully understand the scale of the disruption if even a limited conflict could unleash.

Taiwan sits at the centre of the global semiconductor industry. The island produces more than 60 per cent of the world’s semiconductors and nearly 90 per cent of the most advanced chips used in smartphones, Artificial Intelligence systems, automobiles, defence equipment and data centres. Dependence on Taiwanese chipmaker TSMC has become so overwhelming that semiconductors are now widely described as the ‘new oil’ of the global economy.
Manufacturing choke

A military confrontation in the Taiwan Strait – or even a blockade, cyberattack or disruption to shipping routes – could rapidly choke global manufacturing. Cars, consumer electronics, telecom equipment, cloud infrastructure and industrial machinery would face severe shortages. Factories across continents could slow or shut down within weeks, reviving inflationary pressures that many economies are still struggling to contain.

For India, the consequences could be especially severe. Despite the Government’s push for semiconductor manufacturing and supply-chain diversification, India remains heavily dependent on imported electronics components and chip-based systems. From smartphones and telecom networks to automobiles and defence equipment, the country’s industrial ecosystem remains deeply tied to East Asian supply chains.

A Taiwan conflict would accelerate the fragmentation of the global economy into competing geopolitical blocs. Trade, technology and supply chains would become instruments of strategic rivalry rather than economic efficiency

A Taiwan crisis would hit India through multiple channels simultaneously. The first would be a supply shock. Electronics manufacturing, one of India’s fastest-growing sectors, could face immediate disruption because of shortages of critical semiconductor components. Automobile production could once again experience chip-related slowdowns similar to those seen during the pandemic years.

Fragmentation threat

The second impact would come through energy markets. Any confrontation involving China and the United States would likely destabilise shipping routes across the Indo-Pacific, driving crude oil prices sharply higher. India, which imports more than 85 per cent of its crude oil requirements, would face renewed inflationary pressures, fiscal strain and pressure on the rupee.

The third impact would be financial instability. Global investors usually retreat from emerging markets during periods of geopolitical uncertainty. A Taiwan crisis could trigger capital outflows, stock market volatility and currency pressures across Asia, including India.

But the larger concern lies beyond immediate economics. A Taiwan conflict would accelerate the fragmentation of the global economy into competing geopolitical blocs. Trade, technology and supply chains would increasingly become instruments of strategic rivalry rather than economic efficiency. The era of hyper-globalisation that shaped the post-Cold War world could gradually give way to economic nationalism, strategic decoupling and deeper geopolitical distrust.

Taiwan is no longer just a distant geopolitical dispute confined to East Asia. Its stability has become central to the functioning of the global economy and modern globalisation itself. The Taiwan Strait sits at the heart of critical technology supply chains, international trade networks and semiconductor production that power industries worldwide. Any conflict or disruption there would rapidly spread far beyond the region, affecting fuel prices, financial markets, manufacturing and everyday consumer goods across continents.

In today’s deeply interconnected world, peace in the Taiwan Strait is not merely a regional concern but a global economic necessity.

Related Posts

Awesome foursome rattles BJP
Insight

Awesome foursome rattles BJP

June 27, 2026
Partition trauma with a thoughtful mind, secular spirit and sharp eye
Insight

Partition trauma with a thoughtful mind, secular spirit and sharp eye

June 27, 2026
Sustainable Himalayan Tourism Is the Need of the Hour
Insight

Himalayan tourism needs a new model

June 27, 2026
Motilal vs Gandhi: The Untold Story of Anand Bhawan
Insight

The lingering influence of Motilal Nehru’s liberalism, Jawaharlal’s Gandhian- Marxism and Jinnah’s poison

June 18, 2026
China's Colonial Games In Tibet: Book Exposes Xi Regime
Insight

The weapon of words

June 14, 2026
BRICS Summit Exposes India’s Strategic Challenges
Insight

Tehran, Moscow

June 6, 2026
Load More
Next Post
India Accelerates Ambitious Bid for 2036 Olympics

A sporting LEAP

Recent News

Semiconductor
News

Finance Ministry okays Rs 1.25 lakh cr for Semiconductor Mission

by Blitz India Media
June 30, 2026
0

Blitz Bureau NEW DELHI: The Finance Ministry's Expenditure Finance Committee (EFC) has approved an outlay of Rs 1.25 lakh crore...

Read moreDetails
India Faces Water Crisis by 2030, ₹20 Lakh Crore Investment Opportunity

India’s water sector offers Rs 20 lakh cr investment

June 30, 2026
India Thailand Partnership

India, Thailand discuss strengthening strategic partnership

June 30, 2026
artificial intelligence

85 pc Indian consumers trust AI

June 30, 2026
Renewables in the reckoning

India’s energy boom draws US investors

June 30, 2026

Blitz Highlights

  • Special
  • Spotlight
  • Insight
  • Entertainment
  • Health

International Editions

  • US (New York)
  • UK (London)
  • Middle East (Dubai)
  • Tanzania (Africa)

Nation

  • East
  • West
  • South
  • North
  • Hindi Edition

E-paper

  • India
  • Hindi E-paper
  • Dubai E-Paper
  • USA E-Paper
  • UK-Epaper
  • Tanzania E-paper

Useful Links

  • About us
  • Team
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact

©2024 Blitz India Media -Building A New Nation

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

    No Result
    View All Result
    • Blitz Highlights
      • Special
      • Spotlight
      • Insight
      • Entertainment
      • Sports
    • Opinion
    • Legal
    • Perspective
    • Nation
      • East
      • West
      • North
      • South
    • Business & Economy
    • World
    • Hindi Edition
    • International Editions
      • Dubai
      • Tanzania
      • United Kingdom
      • USA
    • Blitz India Business

    ©2024 Blitz India Media -Building A New Nation