Japan registered a commercial deficit in its fiscal year of March-April, but accumulated a surplus with the United States, the Ministry of Finance reported Thursday.
The Global Japan commercial deficit totaled 5.2 billion yen ($ 37 billion) for the fiscal year until March, for the fourth consecutive year of deficits, according to provisional statistics.
The surplus with the United States shot 9 billion yen ($ 63 billion).
Exports to the United States are a contentious issue for the president of the United States, Donald Trump, and Japanese negotiators are in Washington to argue their case against the higher rates of the United States. Japan is a key ally of the USA and a great investor in the United States, which uses hundreds of thousands of Americans.
Trump said on April 2 that he planned to impose a 24 percent tariff on imports from Japan as part of a higher advertisement or rates in country boxes. After the financial markets panicked, it put a partial retention of 90 days on import taxes, while increasing their rates already pronounced in Chinese products to 145 percent.
Japan still faces a 10 percent reference rate and a 25 percent tax in imported cars, car parts, steel and aluminum exports. Most of these tasks recently entered into force, but they raise a serious challenge for Prime Minister Shigeru Ihiba.
Some analysts say that Tokyo could announce surprise concessions, such as importing more American rice. Rice occupies a special place in the Japanese psyche as the basic element of the nation and for a long time has been a protected sector in Japan. But recent a shortage of rice has bone thrust prices.
Japan’s annual exports rose 5.9 percent compared to the previous year, helped by strong shipments of goods such as chips and computer vehicles. Imports increased 4.7 percent. But a Japanese Waker made imports more expensive.
A recent influx of foreign tourists to Japan has promoted the highest exports, since expenses count as exports.
For the month of March, Japan registered a commercial surplus or 544 billion yen ($ 4 billion). Exports rose almost 4 percent compared to the previous year, during the sixth consecutive month of profits, although the increase was slower than in February.
Exports to the United States increased by 3 percent, while shipments to the rest of Asia grew 5.5 percent. Exports to China fell, while sending them to Hong Kong, Taiwan and South Korea increased.
“This is probably due to the writing of exports within Asia to avoid tariff conflicts with the United States,” said Min Joo Kang, the main economist of ING, in a report.
Posted on April 17, 2025