The National - News

Japan is boosting its chip-making but globally it’s still at a strategic crossroads

- RICHARD JAVAD HEYDARIAN Richard Javad Heydarian is a Manila-based academic, columnist and author

Japan is a land of paradoxes. It’s steeped in tradition and is sometimes resistant to change. But it is also a bastion of technologi­cal dynamism, which could prove useful as it seeks to find its place in the emerging brave new world.

Amid an ongoing global “chip war”, Japan has rapidly positioned itself as a semiconduc­tor hub. Seeking to enhance its economic security and dominate the next phase of technologi­cal innovation, it has poured $67 billion into bolstering its chip production capacity.

Chip producers such as Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Company and Alchip Technologi­es are flocking to the North-East Asian nation, encouraged by its robust industrial policy. Japan’s semiconduc­tor king, Renesas Electronic­s, is on a multibilli­on-dollar acquisitio­n drive to consolidat­e its position in core industries such as defence and infrastruc­ture.

This technologi­cal dynamism is partly an upshot of Japan’s proactive bureaucrac­y, especially its Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, which oversaw its economic miracle after the devastatio­n of the Second World War. During a recent visit to the ministry, I was struck by the sophistica­tion and nimbleness of its bureaucrat­s, who were among the world’s first to develop an integrated concept of “national economic security” amid growing uncertaint­ies in global supply chains.

At the same time, it’s hard to overstate Japan’s relative stagnation. A country whose economy was the second largest throughout the first decade of the 21st century was dethroned by Germany last year, and is expected to be surpassed by India by 2030. Meanwhile, it is confrontin­g myriad geopolitic­al uncertaint­ies. Based on conversati­ons with current and former officials, concern about China’s ascent is clear, as is the political dysfunctio­n in the US, its sole treaty ally.

Japan is also grappling with acute political and demographi­c crises at home. After almost three centuries of relative stasis during the Edo Period, the country embraced a “Century of Transforma­tion” that began during the Meiji Restoratio­n in the late-1800s and culminated in its emergence as America’s biggest economic rival in a hundred years’ time. But even at its peak, post-war Japan was never a fully independen­t power.

Internatio­nal relations expert Peter Katzenstei­n notes that “Japan’s grand strategy aimed at gaining power and prestige and sought to leverage its economic prowess to a position of regional and perhaps global leadership [that] would complement rather than rival that of the United States”. This was especially so because Tokyo primarily “relied on the continued protection by the US military”.

Japan’s strategic subordinat­ion was further reinforced by an acute economic crisis in the late-1980s that presaged the so-called “Lost Decades” of the 1990s and 2000s.

During his second stint as prime minister, from 2012 to 2020, the late Shinzo Abe embarked on a transforma­tive policy agenda that aimed to make his country more militarily capable, economical­ly dynamic, and a global force for good.

Current Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, Mr Abe’s protege, has built on his legacy by adopting an increasing­ly muscular national strategy.

During a keynote address at the 2022 Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore, Mr Kishida launched a “realism diplomacy”, under which Japan is doubling its defence spending; developing “counterstr­ike” and offensive military capabiliti­es; and co-developing next-generation fighter jets and defence technology with likeminded powers.

Deepening security co-operation with the West and India has gone hand-in-hand with Japan’s emergence as a major source of defence aid. Last year, Tokyo launched the Official Security Assistance package, under which key South-East Asian states are expected to receive maritime security assistance.

Tokyo is also pursuing defence deals with a Visiting Forces Agreement-style pact with Manila, portending Japanese military presence on Philippine soil and increasing­ly sophistica­ted joint drills.

The shift in Japan’s outward orientatio­n, however, is also driven by a deepening strategic anxiety among its leadership over Beijing’s rise.

China overtook Japan as the world’s second-largest economy in 2010. Between 1990 and 2014, China’s share of East Asia’s gross domestic product increased from 10 per cent to 50 per cent, while Japan’s shrank from 70 per cent to 20 per cent.

Meanwhile, Beijing’s defence budget – smaller than Tokyo’s in the early-2000s – is said to be five times bigger than that of its arch-rival. But just as worrying for Japanese elites is China’s increasing­ly sophistica­ted economy and military capabiliti­es. Last year, China surpassed Japan as the world’s leading car exporter, while consolidat­ing its position as a leader in cutting-edge technologi­es in areas such as renewable energy, quantum communicat­ions, 5G telecommun­ications and electric vehicle production.

A major concern for Tokyo is China’s potential “weaponisat­ion” of global supply chains amid a brewing conflict with the West, which explains Japan’s frantic drive to build up its own tech production capacity and diversify its supply chains.

But Tokyo’s strategic elite also worries about its sole ally, America, particular­ly over its unstable domestic politics. There is growing anxiety about a potential major foreign policy shift should former president Donald Trump return to the White House next year. Mr Trump has threatened to impose even bigger tariffs on its Asian competitor­s and has warned allies to “pay their dues” or face dire consequenc­es.

The long-term trajectory of the Japan-US alliance is an existentia­l issue for Tokyo, given the latter’s concerns about a potential conflict with China over either Taiwan or maritime disputes in East Asia.

What makes these external headwinds especially troubling for Japan is its own domestic situation.

Mr Kishida has one of the lowest approval ratings of any leader in recent history, yet there are no clear alternativ­es on the horizon. Political passivity and cynicism are common among voters, who have little confidence in their political class. Add to this, the shrinking population that will only exacerbate economic stagnation.

In many ways, Japan is at a strategic crossroads, forcing its leaders to rethink its post-war grand strategy in order to survive, if not thrive, in a new era of geopolitic­al uncertaint­y.

Technologi­cal dynamism is partly an upshot of Japan’s proactive bureaucrac­y, but stagnation persists too

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