
U.S-Japan trade deal guarantees lowest tariff rates for chips, pharma, Japanese official says
Japan's leading trade negotiator said on Tuesday that the trade deal Tokyo agreed with the United States last week guarantees Japan will always receive the lowest tariff rate on chips and pharmaceuticals of all the pacts negotiated by Washington.
"If a third country agrees with the United States on lower rates on chips and pharmaceuticals, those lower rates would apply to Japan," Ryosei Akazawa told a news conference.
The European Union secured a 15% baseline tariff as part of a framework trade deal with the U.S. this week, averting looming new tariffs on chips and pharmaceuticals.
Japan last week struck a trade deal with the U.S. that lowers tariffs on cars and other goods to 15% in exchange for a U.S.-bound $550 billion Japanese investment package including equity, loans and guarantees.
Asked why there has been no joint statement on the agreement, Akazawa said Japan is prioritizing having President Donald Trump sign an executive order to bring the agreed 15% tariff rate into effect.
"We want to concentrate our efforts on getting the tariffs lowered first, and then we can consider whether an official document on the agreement is necessary," he said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Kyodo News
25 minutes ago
- Kyodo News
Japanese population down record 900,000, 16th straight yr of decline
TOKYO - The population of Japanese nationals in 2024 fell by around 908,000 from a year earlier to 120,653,227, declining for the 16th straight year and recording the largest reduction since the current method of tracking began in 1968, government data showed Wednesday. The latest figures come as policymakers continue to struggle to reverse falling birthrates and regional depopulation.


Japan Today
an hour ago
- Japan Today
7-Eleven parent to open 1,000 new stores in Japan, 1,300 in U.S. to drive growth
Seven & i Holdings Co said Wednesday it plans to open around 1,000 new convenience stores in Japan and 1,300 in North America as part of a growth strategy through the year ending February 2031. The Japanese retail giant, seeking an independent path after Canadian retailer Alimentation Couche-Tard Inc withdrew its $47 billion buyout proposal in July, said it expects revenues from its convenience stores in fiscal 2030 to reach 11.3 trillion yen (76.5 billion), over 1 trillion yen more than fiscal 2024, by the expansion. "It is extremely important that we undergo changes now," Stephen Hayes Dacus, who became the retailer's first foreign CEO in May, told a press conference. "We will change the way we run our business from the very beginning." Seven & i operated around 21,600 7-Eleven stores in Japan and some 13,000 outlets in North America in fiscal 2024. The expansion comes as its convenience unit 7-Eleven Japan Co saw an 11 percent drop in operating profit in the March-May period from a year earlier amid a saturated domestic market. Seven & i is focusing on enhancing its value after the Canadian operator of Circle K convenience stores withdrew the purchase offer due to "a lack of constructive engagement," ending nearly a year of talks. In a bid to fend off Couche-Tard's takeover attempt, Seven & i has outlined a series of restructuring plans, shedding its noncore operations and focusing on its 7-Eleven convenience store business. Among reform steps, Seven & i agreed to sell its subsidiary operating the Ito-Yokado supermarket chain, which has recorded consistent losses in recent years, to U.S. private equity firm Bain Capital in September. The subsidiary, York Holdings Co, operates 31 retailers, including the Denny's casual restaurant brand in Japan, the Loft outlet chain and children's clothing chain Akachan Honpo Co. Seven & i has also said it will sell part of its shareholding in Seven Bank to deconsolidate the banking subsidiary. © KYODO


Japan Today
an hour ago
- Japan Today
Japan tariff negotiator arrives in U.S. seeking quick auto tariff cut
Japan's chief tariff negotiator Ryosei Akazawa arrived Tuesday night in Washington, where he will ask U.S. cabinet members to implement as quickly as possible an agreed cut in tariffs on Japanese car and auto part imports. Akazawa's latest visit comes two weeks after he and U.S. President Donald Trump struck a trade deal under which the United States committed to lowering the so-called reciprocal tariff rate on Japanese goods, due to take effect on Thursday, to 15 percent from the threatened 25 percent. At that time, Trump also agreed to reduce auto tariffs to 15 percent for Japan in exchange for a promise to invest massively in the United States. However, unlike the country-specific tariff rate, it remains unclear when the Trump administration plans to implement the lowered auto tariffs. Using a different legal framework than his reciprocal tariff scheme, Trump raised the auto tariff on U.S.-bound vehicles to 27.5 percent from 2.5 percent in April, citing national security concerns. Akazawa, Japan's minister for economic revitalization, said before his departure that he will attempt to ensure the United States meets the terms of the bilateral agreement in the upcoming ninth round of talks with Trump's trade team. Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba has faced criticism from opposition lawmakers for not having signed a document with Washington to confirm the trade agreement. Some critics have suggested there might be misunderstandings, given there are discrepancies in the Japanese and U.S. governments' descriptions of the agreement. Under the deal, for example, Japanese officials have said imports from Japan already subject to tariffs of 15 percent or higher will not face the 15 percent duty on top. But an executive order signed last week by Trump modifying reciprocal tariff rates, as well as other formal U.S. documents, made no mention of such a condition. While speaking of Trump during a parliament session earlier this week in Tokyo, Ishiba said he is "not an ordinary person. He is someone who wants to change the rules." "It is more difficult to put (an agreement) into practice than to reach an agreement," Ishiba said. Akazawa is scheduled to stay in the U.S. capital through Friday and may hold talks with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick. © KYODO