Deep rifts remain in Japan-US trade postures despite new dialogue chapter

Author: Agencies

TOKYO: A new economic dialogue setting out parameters to enhance economic ties between Japan and the United States recently while on the one hand purports to chart a rosy bilateral trade understanding between both countries has also underscored some long-standing gulfs in economic objectives.

On Tuesday, visiting US Vice President Mike Pence held talks with Japan’s Deputy Prime Minister Taro Aso and launched the US-Japan Economic Dialogue, which will ostensibly act as means to deepen bilateral economic cooperation through an ongoing forum.

The dialogue was agreed to in principle between Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and US President Donald Trump when the two leaders met in February and spent some highly-publicized “quality time” on the links together at one of Trumps palatial abodes. The dialogue sets out three policy pillars that will structure further talks to be held in December, but a number of thorny issues were discernibly shelved for the time being, perhaps owing to more pressing geopolitical concerns and the need to show a united front, but, nevertheless, revealing a sizable gulf in each country’s economic postures that will be tough to resolve, analysts attest.

“Japan was one of the last countries to join the now defunct Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) multilateral free trade agreement and during exhaustive negotiations with the US came to a basic understanding that would allow the pact to go ahead with the ‘elimination’ of trade tariffs,” Hisao Katayama, a senior equity analyst at Nomura Securities Co., told Xinhua.

“Japan was desperate to protect sectors that would have been destroyed if import tariffs were scrapped and this was one of the main reasons the TPP negotiations dragged on for so long, allowing the Trump administration to sweep in and sweep away the pact,” Katayama added.

The analyst was referring, essentially, to the Abe administration at the time kowtowing to powerful business lobbies that continue to hold a significant amount of both financial and political clout.

These former negotiations, that saw Japan hugely reluctant to drop its hefty tariffs on automotive imports from the US and, perhaps more-so, vehemently protect its agricultural sector from cheaper international competition, form the backdrop of Japan’s future and likely thorny economic ties with the US With Trump having already taken aim at Japan a number of times since becoming president for Japan’s seemingly perpetually weak currency and more recently ardently suggesting that some kind of intervention might take place if the dollar continues to strengthen, the fact that the United States’ logged a hefty 68.94-billion- US dollar trade deficit with Japan in 2016 also puts Japan’s future trade hand in a fundamentally weaker position.

“Admittedly, on the surface, Japan and the US are exceedingly close friends and allies, as evidenced by Abe rushing to the side of Trump as one of the first leaders to congratulate him after winning the presidential race and prior to that as a ‘friendly social call’ as it was portrayed,” Katayama said.

“But be this as it may, with the TPP deal on the line Abe was looking at the time to curry economic favor in lieu of the pact and was actively promoting Japan Inc. and all the ways Japan had and could support Trump’s new ‘America First’ policy and in doing so hoping to jump to the top of the FTA queue,” explained Katayama. But Pence had clearly been appraised of Japan’s inherent inclination to take care of its own and not necessarily work towards win-win deals. Trump would have more than likely seen Japan and Abe’s overtures for what they were, with past negotiations not forgotten.

Japan and Washington during the Obama years were at an almost permanent TPP standoff regarding what Japan described as its five “sacred sectors”, rice, wheat, beef and pork, dairy products and sugar, and its desire to protect these industries, and the US demanding full access to Japanese markets for its agricultural goods. Washington had also insisted that Japan eliminate some technical barriers that prevent the sales of some US cars in Japan, while maintaining tariffs on Japanese automobile imports.

Among the 12 countries involved in the TPP free trade talks, Japan and the US, the two largest economies involved in the talks at the time, were constantly at loggerheads, as Japan remained ever-reluctant to alleviate tariffs to protect its own interests.

Abe, under immense pressure from farm lobbies, such as the politically powerful Central Union of Agricultural Cooperatives, tried, against the spirit of the pact, to uphold tariffs on its sensitive sectors, which in the case of rice, saw tariffs of more than 700 percent slapped on foreign imports to protect the age-old sector from cheaper overseas competition.

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