Japan will tell the US in their economic talks that any border tax the US government imposes on imports should not break WTO rules, an adviser to Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said yesterday.
Yasutoshi Nishimura also said Japan would not rule out a bilateral trade agreement with the US, but talks might not start soon because Washington is putting a higher priority on renegotiating the North American Free Trade Agreement.
“We don’t want any border tax to violate WTO rules by becoming a tax system intended to promote exports,” Nishimura said in an interview. “Our position is WTO rules and multilateralism are important, and we want to lobby for that.”
Abe and US President Donald Trump agreed last month to establish a new framework for economic dialogue to discuss trade and infrastructure investment.
The two countries have not set a schedule for their talks.
Trump has spoken positively about a 20 percent border adjustment tax being pushed by Republicans in US Congress as a way to boost exports, but it is still uncertain if he will fully endorse the proposal.
Trump, who has lashed out at US companies for moving operations and jobs to countries such as Mexico, had previously sent mixed signals on the border adjustment tax.
Some Japanese policymakers grew concerned about US protectionism and a return to 1980s trade friction after Trump criticized Japanese auto imports shortly after taking office in January.
Trump has since softened his rhetoric on Japan following a summit meeting with Abe where the two leaders agreed to hold the economic dialogue.
Japan’s hopes to avoid trade friction by reminding Trump that the trade relationship has changed a lot since the 1980s, Nishimura said.
Japanese automakers now produce a lot of cars in the US, which dovetails with Trump’s repeated pledges to create more jobs, Nishimura said.
Japan is interested in using the new dialogue with the US to talk about infrastructure investment, boosting other types of direct investment and US shale gas imports, Nishimura said.
Some economists and policymakers are worried that the US could use the dialogue framework to criticize Japan’s currency policy and its aggressive monetary easing.
Nishimura said Japan needs easy monetary policy because it is still in deflation and that foreign-exchange levels are determined by markets.
Heavy rain and strong winds yesterday disrupted flights, trains and ferries, forcing the closure of roads across large parts of New Zealand’s North Island, while snapping power links to tens of thousands. Domestic media reported a few flights had resumed operating by afternoon from the airport in Wellington, the capital, although cancelations were still widespread after airport authorities said most morning flights were disrupted. Air New Zealand said it hoped to resume services when conditions ease later yesterday, after it paused operations at Wellington, Napier and Palmerston North airports. Online images showed flooded semi-rural neighborhoods, inundated homes, trees fallen on vehicles and collapsed
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Two sitting Philippine senators have been identified as “coperpetrators” in former Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte’s crimes against humanity trial at the International Criminal Court (ICC), documents released by prosecutors showed. Philippine senators Ronald Dela Rosa and Christopher Go are among eight current and former officials named in a document dated Feb. 13 and posted to the court’s Web site. ICC prosecutors have charged Duterte with three counts of crimes against humanity, alleging his involvement in at least 76 murders as part of his “war on drugs.” “Duterte and his coperpetrators shared a common plan or agreement to ‘neutralize’ alleged criminals in the Philippines