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Food Is Once Again a Hot Election Issue as Japan Goes to Polls
Food Is Once Again a Hot Election Issue as Japan Goes to Polls

Bloomberg

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Bloomberg

Food Is Once Again a Hot Election Issue as Japan Goes to Polls

Soaring rice prices have become a flashpoint for public frustration in Japan, and a key issue in the upcoming election. Welcome to the new Business of Food newsletter, covering how the world feeds itself in a changing economy and climate, from farming to supply chains to consumer trends. This week, Sakura Murakami looks at the political power of rice in Japan. Any tips or feedback? Email food czar Agnieszka de Sousa. And if you aren't yet signed up to receive this newsletter, please do so here.

Donald Trump, Japan's Ishiba fail to reach trade deal at G7 Summit
Donald Trump, Japan's Ishiba fail to reach trade deal at G7 Summit

Business Standard

time17-06-2025

  • Automotive
  • Business Standard

Donald Trump, Japan's Ishiba fail to reach trade deal at G7 Summit

Failure to secure a concrete deal may undermine Ishiba's leadership ahead of next month's upper house polls, despite his hopes of the summit marking a breakthrough in ongoing tariff talks Bloomberg By Sakura Murakami and Yoshiaki Nohara US President Donald Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba failed to reach an agreement on a trade package on the sidelines of the Group of Seven summit, an outcome that leaves the Asian nation inching closer to a possible recession as the pain of US tariffs hits its economy. 'There are still some points on which the two sides are not on the same page, so we have not yet reached an agreement on the trade package,' Ishiba said to reporters on Monday in Calgary in between G7 meetings. The failure to reach a concrete agreement will raise questions over Ishiba's effectiveness as leader ahead of a crucial upper house election next month, after he touted the summit as a possible 'milestone' opportunity in tariff negotiations that have continued for about two months. With the 25 per cent auto levy in particular dealing a direct blow to the nation's most important source of exports, Ishiba's standing will likely be damaged in the eyes of Japanese voters. 'We will continue to actively coordinate with the United States to reach an agreement that is beneficial for both countries, without sacrificing Japan's national interests,' he said. He added that he could not say when a deal may be reached and that negotiations will continue on the ministerial level. As with other nations, Japan is subject to a 25 per cent levy on cars and auto parts and a 50 per cent tariff on steel and aluminum. A 10 per cent across-the-board levy on other goods is set to rise to 24 per cent in early July. Asked if the July deadline might be extended, Ishiba declined to comment. There is a particular focus on auto tariffs, which Trump has threatened to hike even further. The auto industry is crucial to the Japanese economy, employing some 5.6 million people, about 8.3 per cent of the country's work force, and generating around 10 per cent of gross domestic product, according to the Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association. Major automakers including Toyota Motor Corp., Honda Motor Co., Mazda Motor Corp. and Subaru Corp. are bracing for a collective hit of more than $19 billion this fiscal year alone from the tariffs. The impact on major auto companies would reverberate through the web of small- and mid-sized businesses that form the industry's backbone. Two-thirds of Japan's workforce is employed by firms with fewer than 1,000 people, and many of those jobs are tied in some way to the auto industry. Leading up to the summit, local media reported a vast array of potential concessions that Japan was suggesting in a bid to close the trade gap with the US, ranging from importing more soy from the US to cooperation on ship-building. Tokyo has also tried to reason with the US by citing its standing as the leading investor to the US as leverage, saying the tariffs would negatively impact Japan's capability to invest in the US by cutting into its domestic economy. Japan's cumulative foreign direct investment into the US stood at $783 billion at the end of 2023 and Ishiba pledged to boost Japan's overall investment in the US to $1 trillion during his summit with Trump in February. In return, Ishiba and his top negotiator Ryosei Akazawa had consistently pushed for a full removal of all tariffs imposed by the US. Ultimately, it doesn't appear that those promises impressed the US. Ishiba has seen a bump in his ratings recently, thanks in part to Agriculture Minister Shinjiro Koizumi taking on rising rice prices — an issue emblematic of how inflation is hitting households. His approval ratings rose 5 percentage points to 38 per cent, according to a poll conducted over the weekend by broadcaster FNN. But the lack of substantial progress on a trade deal even after meeting with Trump threatens to erase those gains. Japan was among the first nations to start talks with the US and was considered likely to be among the first to reach an agreement. But it appears to have fallen behind others as the US struck a deal with the UK and reached a truce over tariffs with China.

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