The flag of Japan (proper) hangs outdoors the New York Inventory Trade on Might 5, 2008, in honor of Ryozo Kato, the ambassador of Japan to america on the time, ringing the opening bell.
Stan Honda/AFP by way of Getty Photos
conceal caption
toggle caption
Stan Honda/AFP by way of Getty Photos
Robert Ward is the Japan chair on the London-based suppose tank the Worldwide Institute for Strategic Research (IISS), the place he additionally directs the geo-economics and technique program. He’s the writer of “Evaluating Japan’s New Grand Technique“.
Since President Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs that focused America’s buddies and foes alike, there was alarm in Japan, one of many United States’ staunchest allies in Asia, which additionally sees the U.S. as its most essential export market, accounting for round 20% of all Japanese exports.
Though a lot of them are paused, Trump’s tariffs current a significant risk to Japan’s already flagging economic system. Including to the gloom in Tokyo is the uncertainty of U.S. tariff coverage towards China and the Affiliation of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), the place Japanese corporations are additionally closely invested. Small marvel then that Japan’s Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba has described the scenario as a “nationwide disaster.”
Ishiba has come beneath strain from Japan’s opposition events for his cautious dealing with of tariff negotiations with the U.S. This partly displays Japan’s electoral cycle. Two essential elections loom in July: first the Tokyo meeting ballot after which that for the higher home of Japan’s parliament. Ishiba and his Liberal Democratic Celebration (LDP) are flagging within the opinion polls and so could wrestle to carry out nicely in these.
The LDP with its coalition associate, Komeito, has been a minority authorities since its poor efficiency in final 12 months’s common election, which was held instantly after Ishiba’s appointment as prime minister. The 2 events have a majority within the higher home of parliament, however shedding in July would severely compromise the federal government’s capacity to enact coverage and will even set off Ishiba’s resignation as prime minister. The opposition thus scents blood.
Japan’s restricted room for maneuver

President Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba maintain a joint press convention on the White Home, on Feb. 7. Ishiba, who took workplace in October, is the primary Asian chief to go to Trump since he returned to the White Home.
Andrew Harnik/Getty Photos
conceal caption
toggle caption
Andrew Harnik/Getty Photos
However Japan’s room for maneuver in tariff negotiations with the U.S. is proscribed. Not like, for instance, the European Union, it doesn’t benefit from the benefit of with the ability to negotiate as a bloc. Whereas Japan’s continues to be one of many world’s largest economies, its gross home product is barely simply over a tenth the dimensions of the U.S. Entry to the U.S. market can also be important for a lot of Japanese corporations given the shrinking residence market and growing geopolitical difficulties with the Chinese language market. That is one cause for Nippon Metal’s bid for U.S. Metal.
Furthermore, the U.S. is a significant provider of meals, uncooked supplies and mineral fuels to Japan. Certainly, these things account for some 30% of Japan’s general import invoice from the U.S., so, Japan can sick afford to enter a full-blown commerce struggle with the U.S. Japan’s giant holdings of U.S. Treasurys are additionally unlikely to be weaponized. Japan briefly flirted with this selection in a earlier bout of bilateral financial pressure within the late Nineteen Nineties, solely to row again shortly.
Tokyo additionally must steadiness its financial wants with its overriding strategic precedence: preserving its safety relationship with Washington. The U.S. is Japan’s solely safety treaty ally, and that is unlikely to alter. Whereas Ishiba floated the concept of creating an Asian NATO simply earlier than changing into prime minister, this seems to be distant given the paucity of potential companions within the area and the U.S. ‘s personal broader questioning of its abroad safety commitments beneath the second Trump administration.
The sharp deterioration within the strategic surroundings round Japan in recent times has additional raised the significance to Tokyo of the U.S.-Japan safety alliance. Considered from Tokyo, its speedy neighbors in continental Asia current an arc of risk, from Russia within the north, with which relations have chilled for the reason that Russian invasion of Ukraine, to nuclear-armed and hostile North Korea within the middle and China within the south, which is growing its menacing of Taiwan. China-Russia and Russia-North Korea strategic alignment and cooperation additional elevates Japan’s strategic anxiousness.
For these causes, Japan can also be unlikely to hunt to hedge towards U.S. commerce unpredictability by way of considerably hotter ties with China. Below Ishiba’s administration, Sino-Japanese relations have warmed barely. However there stay important limitations to deeper enhancements. Tokyo’s issues about Beijing’s intentions towards Taiwan have been talked about — it views any cross-strait instability as affecting Japanese safety, too. Intensifying Chinese language intrusions into waters round Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands, which lie near Taiwan and which Japan controls and China claims, are additionally inflicting alarm in Tokyo.
New Japanese instruments and historic expertise

Akira Banzai (middle), chief of Japan’s farmers affiliation, and their members gesture as they protest towards the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) free commerce talks at a rally in Tokyo on March 12, 2013, when then-Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was anticipated to announce he would be part of TPP negotiations that week.
Yoshikazu Tsuno/AFP by way of Getty Photos
conceal caption
toggle caption
Yoshikazu Tsuno/AFP by way of Getty Photos
Regardless of the constraints, Japan will not be with out choices each in its commerce negotiations with the U.S. and extra broadly. When it comes to the previous, Japan may, for instance, agree to extend imports of U.S. agricultural items, however the political sensitivities over rice. Japan’s agricultural foyer is a shadow of its former self — farmer numbers are dwindling and commerce liberalization beneath Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s 2012-2020 administration has diminished its political clout.
Useful resource-poor Japan may additionally agree with out an excessive amount of issue to import extra liquefied pure gasoline (LNG) from the U.S., or to assist fund an LNG venture in Alaska. Some concessions on non-tariff limitations to the imports of U.S.-made automobiles into Japan additionally look probably. At his first summit with Trump, Ishiba additionally promised to boost Japan’s funding within the U.S. to “an unprecedented quantity” of $1 trillion, one thing that Japan will come beneath strain to ship upon.
Japan additionally has company in its different worldwide ties. Japan is, for instance, overwhelmingly the biggest economic system within the Complete and Progressive Settlement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) mega commerce bloc and its de facto chief. The accession to the CPTPP of the UK, now an in depth strategic associate of Japan, in 2024 ought to give Japan invaluable coverage assist in its efforts to maintain international commerce channels open. Japan’s membership of Asia’s different mega commerce bloc, the Regional Complete Financial Partnership (RCEP), can also be strategically essential for Tokyo. Though RCEP is dominated by China, Japan’s membership provides Tokyo an opportunity to assist form any reconfiguration of regional commerce triggered by U.S. tariff coverage.
Lastly, it’s price noting that few nations have as in depth expertise of coping with lurches in U.S. coverage as Japan. Whether or not after President Richard Nixon’s delinking of the U.S. greenback from gold in 1971, which upended Japan’s overseas and financial coverage, the U.S. financial “Japan bashing” of the Nineteen Eighties, or the U.S. “Japan passing” in favor of China of the Nineteen Nineties, Japan responded pragmatically by altering coverage the place wanted to make sure it was capable of protect the crucial safety alliance with the U.S.
This time spherical, Japan can also be lucky that its overseas, geo-economic and defense-policy activism for the reason that Prime Minister Abe’s second administration has bequeathed Tokyo some robust instruments for coping with what’s shaping as much as be one other profound shift within the conduct of its key financial and safety interlocutor.