Wings Over the Strait: How Constraint, Cargo, and Strategy Forged Taiwan’s Aviation Ecosystem Beyond Redundancy
The Geopolitical and Economic Logic of a Multi-Airline Hub Model Taiwan’s aviation landscape, anchored by three long-haul full-service carriers, appears structurally excessive until examined through the lens of geography, political constraint, and industrial strategy. Rather than market inefficiency, the presence of China Airlines, EVA Air, and Starlux Airlines represents a calculated equilibrium engineered for resilience. Isolated from global aviation frameworks and constrained by geopolitical realities, Taiwan treats air connectivity as critical infrastructure, necessitating redundant capacity and internal competition. The system thrives on a hidden economic anchor: ultra-high-value semiconductor cargo that reshapes route profitability and sustains frequency even when passenger demand falters. Compared to Singapore’s efficiency-driven monopoly, South Korea’s consolidation strategy, or the Gulf’s state-architected network dominance, Taiwan optimizes for connectivity insurance under ...