The Borneo Post

Japan loses out amid China trade threat that shakes markets

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TOKYO: As US President Donald Trump dealt a blow to China with plans to slap tariffs on US$60 billion of trade, he quietly delivered a slap in the face to one of Washington’s closest allies, Japan, which got no exemption from earlier announced duties.

The move to exclude most US allies, but not Japan, from steel and aluminium tariffs that took effect on Friday is an apparent snub to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who has assiduousl­y courted Trump since he was elected.

US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer also ratcheted up pressure for a bilateral trade pact with Tokyo, which has been in sporadic talks with Washington on cutting Japan’s trade surplus.

Abe was the first foreign leader to travel to New York and meet Trump in the days after the November 2016 election, when he presented him with a golf club worth nearly US$4,000 and showered praise on him.

Officials tried to put a positive spin on the trade spat, which comes just as Tokyo seeks to coordinate its North Korea policies with those of Washington, an effort complicate­d by an everchangi­ng cast of characters at the White House.

“We are aware that US Trade Representa­tive Lighthizer has been saying the US wants to negotiate a free trade agreement,” Japanese trade minister Hiroshige Seko told reporters on Friday.

“I understand we will have constructi­ve talks on what’s the best

We are aware that US Trade Representa­tive Lighthizer has been saying the US wants to negotiate a free trade agreement. Hiroshige Seko, Japanese trade minister

framework for Japan and the US as well as the Asia-Pacific region under Japan-US economic dialogue. We want to closely communicat­e with the United States.”

Trump signed a presidenti­al memorandum on Thursday targeting up to US$ 60 billion in Chinese goods with tariffs after a 30-day consultati­on period that starts once a list is published.

China responded strongly and the escalating tension between Beijing and Washington hit financial markets, with investors fearing dire consequenc­es for the global economy if trade barriers start going up.

Lighthizer on Thursday read out a list of countries with which the US was negotiatin­g exemptions from the earlier announced tariffs, among them Argentina, Australia, Brazil, the European Union and South Korea.

“Retaliatio­n against the US trade measures could destroy the free-trade system,” Seko said. “It is extremely important that Japan calmly seeks solutions under the framework of the WTO,” he added, referring to the World Trade Organizati­on. — Reuters

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