Waterloo Region Record

Tough Japan-U.S. trade talks on cars ahead

- MAYUMI TERASHIMA The Japan News

NEW YORK — Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe managed in the framework he agreed upon Wednesday with U.S. President Donald Trump to secure a commitment to refrain from imposing tariffs on imported Japanese automobile­s, while also limiting the reduction of Japan’s tariffs on U.S. agricultur­e, forestry and fisheries products to a certain level.

This represents success ahead of the start of new trade talks, but tough negotiatio­ns appear to lie ahead.

“The negotiatio­ns will not be easy at all,” economic revitaliza­tion minister Toshimitsu Motegi told journalist­s in New York on Wednesday after the Japan-U.S. talks. “But we want to move forward firmly with the talks, attacking where we should attack and defending where we should defend.”

The focus of the upcoming trade talks will be the automobile sector. The Trump administra­tion has shelved for the time being the imposition of tariffs on vehicles imported from Japan, which it has been considerin­g on the supposed grounds of a threat to national security under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act, a U.S. law.

However, the joint statement released by Japan and the United States specifies, as the U.S. position, the aim of increasing U.S. automobile production and employment. Concrete measures to that end could include limits on the import of Japanese cars, or increasing manufactur­ing in the United States. The Japanese government has said it can’t accept export limitation­s, but the United States is likely to push very hard on this topic.

Regarding the trade pact to be newly sought by Japan and the United States, the Japanese government has said it wants a socalled trade agreement on goods, or TAG, which differs from a comprehens­ive free trade agreement, or FTA. This is prompted by strong opposition within Japan to an FTA with the United States, based on concern that larger-scale concession­s would be demanded.

The World Trade Organizati­on, which encompasse­s nearly all the nations of the globe, including Japan and the United States, utilizes the “most-favoured nation” principle, which forbids members from discrimina­ting among their trading partners.

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