Paul Liu (politician)
Appearance
Liu Jin-ching | |
|---|---|
| 劉鏡清 | |
Official portrait, 2024 | |
| 7th Minister of National Development | |
| In office 20 May 2024 – 1 September 2025 | |
| Prime Minister | Cho Jung-tai |
| Preceded by | Kung Ming-hsin |
| Succeeded by | Yeh Chun-hsien |
| Minister without Portfolio | |
| In office 20 May 2024 – 1 September 2025 | |
| Prime Minister | Cho Jung-tai |
| Preceded by | Kung Ming-hsin |
| Succeeded by | Yeh Chun-hsien |
| Personal details | |
| Born | April 15, 1963 |
| Party | Independent |
| Education | Chung Yuan Christian University (BS) National Taiwan University (MBA) |
Paul Liu Jin-ching (Chinese: 劉鏡清; pinyin: Liú Jìngqīng) is a Taiwanese business executive and politician who was the minister of the National Development Council from 2024 to 2025.
Liu worked for IBM Taiwan as an executive for global business services,[1] became director of IBM's General Business division in 2011,[2] and from 2012 to 2021 joined PricewaterhouseCoopers Taiwan as executive vice president and chairman.[3][4] On 16 April 2024, Liu was appointed leader of the National Development Council in president-elect William Lai's incoming administration, succeeding Kung Ming-hsin in the role.[4][2]
References
[edit]- ^ Tchii, Elizabeth (7 May 2009). "Taiwan to provide fully automated tax filings by 2012". Taipei Times. Retrieved 16 April 2024.
- ^ a b Teng, Pei-ju; Lin, Sean (16 April 2024). "New economics, national development heads tapped from private sector". Central News Agency. Retrieved 16 April 2024. Republished as: "Cho names new economics minister". Taipei Times. 17 April 2024. Retrieved 18 April 2024.
- ^ Hsu, Crystal (5 November 2018). "Taiwan lags behind world's top 1,000 companies in R&D expenditure study". Taipei Times. Retrieved 16 April 2024.
- ^ a b Chen, Christie (16 April 2024). "Economics minister, NDC chief among new Cabinet members announced". Central News Agency. Retrieved 16 April 2024. Republished as: Chen, Yun; Madjar, Kayleigh (16 April 2024). "New economics, digital ministers announced". Taipei Times.