Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsU.S. Promised Windfalls From Japan Deal. Tokyo Has Other Ideas.
TOKYOJapan is playing down the risks from its trade deal with President Trump after the White House said the U.S. would direct $550 billion in investments by Japan and keep 90% of the profit.
Tokyos chief negotiator, Ryosei Akazawa, said Monday that the government bank at the center of the investment deal would strictly review the projects it is asked to finance and approve only those that comply with Japanese law. Critics of the deal have suggested Tokyo would have to follow Trumps orders on what to fund, potentially threatening the finances of the Japan Bank for International Cooperation, or JBIC.
Over the weekend, Akazawa said that only 1% to 2% of the $550 billion amount would be actual investment, with the rest coming in the form of loans and loan guarantees.
...
President Trumps statement about 90% of the profit to the U.S., 10% to Japan is purely to draw the attention of his domestic supporters, Kumano said. The actual deal doesnt sound so bad, he said.
https://www.wsj.com/world/asia/u-s-promised-windfalls-from-japan-deal-tokyo-has-other-ideas-da46a756 archived at https://archive.ph/nsPh5
Tokyos chief negotiator, Ryosei Akazawa, said Monday that the government bank at the center of the investment deal would strictly review the projects it is asked to finance and approve only those that comply with Japanese law. Critics of the deal have suggested Tokyo would have to follow Trumps orders on what to fund, potentially threatening the finances of the Japan Bank for International Cooperation, or JBIC.
Over the weekend, Akazawa said that only 1% to 2% of the $550 billion amount would be actual investment, with the rest coming in the form of loans and loan guarantees.
...
President Trumps statement about 90% of the profit to the U.S., 10% to Japan is purely to draw the attention of his domestic supporters, Kumano said. The actual deal doesnt sound so bad, he said.
https://www.wsj.com/world/asia/u-s-promised-windfalls-from-japan-deal-tokyo-has-other-ideas-da46a756 archived at https://archive.ph/nsPh5
Via Professor Krugman:
Trump has now announced a trade deal with the European Union that looks a lot like the deal he made with Japan. I use scare quotes because there is little sign of a quid pro quo. The United States is imposing a 15 percent tariff that is lower than previously threatened, but still vastly higher than we had before Trump. Overall U.S. tariffs seem likely to settle roughly at the level that prevailed after the infamous Smoot-Hawley tariff of 1930.
In return we got a vague promise of higher European investment in the United States. When Japan made a similar promise last week, administration officials asserted that this would mean hundreds of billions flowing into rebuilding U.S. industry. Japanese officials, however, say that the money will consist almost entirely of loans and loan guarantees. This strongly suggests that Japan will, if it does anything at all, simply be sticking Trumps name on money flows that would have happened anyway. Theres every reason to suspect that the same will be true of whatever the EU does.
And like the Japan deal, this deal seems to place lower tariffs on cars made in Europe, which have very little U.S. content, than on cars made in Canada, which contain many American parts. Add in the punishing tariffs on steel and aluminum, and Trumps trade policy seems, if anything, to be tilting the playing field against U.S. manufacturing.
...
OK, I can answer that. If I had been in charge of negotiating with the European Union, I would have been able to get a deal with the following components:
· Very low tariffs on U.S. exports of manufactured goods to Europe, on the order of 1 percent
· Near balance in bilateral trade, with U.S. exports to Europe close to 90 percent of our imports from Europe
· U.S. companies allowed to operate freely in Europe, earning hundreds of billions a year in profits
· European corporations investing more than $150 billion a year real investment, not loans in the United States
Why do I believe that I could have negotiated a deal like that? Because thats what U.S.-EU international transactions actually looked like in 2024. So thats what we could have gotten by doing nothing.
https://paulkrugman.substack.com/p/i-coulda-made-a-better-deal
In return we got a vague promise of higher European investment in the United States. When Japan made a similar promise last week, administration officials asserted that this would mean hundreds of billions flowing into rebuilding U.S. industry. Japanese officials, however, say that the money will consist almost entirely of loans and loan guarantees. This strongly suggests that Japan will, if it does anything at all, simply be sticking Trumps name on money flows that would have happened anyway. Theres every reason to suspect that the same will be true of whatever the EU does.
And like the Japan deal, this deal seems to place lower tariffs on cars made in Europe, which have very little U.S. content, than on cars made in Canada, which contain many American parts. Add in the punishing tariffs on steel and aluminum, and Trumps trade policy seems, if anything, to be tilting the playing field against U.S. manufacturing.
...
OK, I can answer that. If I had been in charge of negotiating with the European Union, I would have been able to get a deal with the following components:
· Very low tariffs on U.S. exports of manufactured goods to Europe, on the order of 1 percent
· Near balance in bilateral trade, with U.S. exports to Europe close to 90 percent of our imports from Europe
· U.S. companies allowed to operate freely in Europe, earning hundreds of billions a year in profits
· European corporations investing more than $150 billion a year real investment, not loans in the United States
Why do I believe that I could have negotiated a deal like that? Because thats what U.S.-EU international transactions actually looked like in 2024. So thats what we could have gotten by doing nothing.
https://paulkrugman.substack.com/p/i-coulda-made-a-better-deal
2 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies

U.S. Promised Windfalls From Japan Deal. Tokyo Has Other Ideas. (Original Post)
muriel_volestrangler
Wednesday
OP
creon
(1,770 posts)1. It is as if
It is as if Trump wants to sabotabe the US economy.
Srkdqltr
(8,712 posts)2. I really dont understand most of this. What Krugman is saying is, we already had the better deal before Trump?
Of course it is, we already knew that.