The Borneo Post

Japan hits back as US mulls auto tariffs

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TOKYO: Japan’s trade minister yesterday pushed back against Washington for considerin­g possible tariffs on automobile imports, a major driver of the Japanese economy.

Hiroshige Seko said the tariffs under considerat­ion – reportedly as high as 25 per cent – would disrupt the global market and go against the rules of the World Trade Organisati­on.

“If, only if, this measure were to be launched, it would be an extremely broad trade restrictio­n measure. Such restrictiv­e measures would plunge the world market into confusion,” Seko told reporters in Tokyo. “It is extremely regrettabl­e.”

The reaction was unusually firm for an official from Japan, known for weighing diplomatic language very carefully.

Seko’s comments came after US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross announced he had initiated a socalled Section 232 investigat­ion on auto trade.

The Wall Street Journal reported earlier Wednesday that US President Donald Trump was asking for vehicle import tariffs as high as 25 per cent.

The US investigat­ion could provide the legal basis to impose tariffs, if it finds imports threaten US national security.

“There is evidence suggesting that, for decades, imports from abroad have eroded our domestic auto industry,” Ross said.

The Trump administra­tion used the same justificat­ion to impose steep tariffs on steel and aluminium, raising the spectre of a trade war.

The Japanese economy – the world’s third largest – relies heavily on exports to the US, particular­ly of automobile­s, as a core driver of overall growth.

Passenger cars make up around 30 per cent of Japan’s total exports to the United States.

Japanese government data published on Monday showed that the country’s politicall­y sensitive trade surplus with the US edged up in April.

Japan logged a surplus of 615.7 billion yen (US$5.6 billion), up 4.7 per cent after a 0.3 per cent decline the previous month, driven partly by demand for cars.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has worked hard to befriend Trump, but Japan was not exempted from the steel and aluminium tariffs.

This prompted Tokyo to inform the WTO last week it had the right to impose tariffs worth 50 billion yen on US goods – equivalent to the impact of the US tariffs on Japanese steel and aluminium products.

The news has already had an impact on Japanese carmakers.

On the Tokyo stock exchange, Honda tumbled 2.81 per cent, Toyota fell 2.63 per cent and Nissan was off 1.62 per cent, all underperfo­rming the wider Nikkei market, which was down 1.22 per cent. — AFP

 ??  ?? Employees of Toyota Motor Corp. work on the assembly line of Mirai fuel cell vehicle (FCV) at the company’s Motomachi plant in Toyota, Aichi prefecture, Japan. — Reuters photo
Employees of Toyota Motor Corp. work on the assembly line of Mirai fuel cell vehicle (FCV) at the company’s Motomachi plant in Toyota, Aichi prefecture, Japan. — Reuters photo

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