Trump for more ‘reciprocal’ trade with Japan in a friendly way

Trump was speaking in Tokyo on the second day of a 12-day Asian trip expected to be dominated by North Korea and trade

November 06, 2017 07:53 am | Updated 07:53 am IST - TOKYO

 U.S. President Donald Trump delivers remarks to U.S. and Japanese business leaders at the U.S. ambassador's residence in Tokyo, Japan on Monday. Standing at rear is U.S. Ambassador to Japan William Hagerty.

U.S. President Donald Trump delivers remarks to U.S. and Japanese business leaders at the U.S. ambassador's residence in Tokyo, Japan on Monday. Standing at rear is U.S. Ambassador to Japan William Hagerty.

U.S. President Donald Trump, charging “Japan has been winning” on trade in recent decades, said he would push for more reciprocal trade with Washington's close U.S. ally — but in a friendly way. Mr. Trump was speaking in Tokyo on the second day of a 12-day Asian trip expected to be dominated by North Korea and trade.

“We have to do more. The United States has suffered massive trade deficits at the hands of Japan for many, many years," Mr. Trump said at the start of a meeting with Japanese business leaders. “We have to negotiate,” he said, adding it would be done in a friendly manner.

Mr. Trump also said Washington wants to make the United States the most attractive place to hire, invest and grow.

“We want free and reciprocal trade, but right now, our trade with Japan is not free and it's not reciprocal, but I know that it will be,” he said.

Japan had a $69-billion trade surplus with the United States last year, according to the U.S. Treasury Department.

The U.S. leader, who met Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Sunday for golf, lunch and dinner, will hold a more formal summit with Mr. Abe later on Monday.

In a second round of economic talks in Washington last month, U.S. Vice President Mike Pence and Japanese Finance Minister Taro Aso, who doubles as deputy premier, failed to bridge differences on thorny trade issues.

The two sides remain at odds over how to frame future trade talks, with Tokyo pushing back against U.S. calls to discuss a bilateral free trade agreement (FTA).

Trump also said that an Indo-Pacific trade framework would produce more in trade that the Trans-Pacific Partnership pact pushed by his predecessor but which he announced Washington would abandon soon after he took office.

“TPP was not the right answer,” he said, adding he knew not everyone in his audience agreed. “We will have much bigger trade with the way we are doing it right now and it will be a much less complex situation.”

The 11 remaining nations in the TPP, to which Japan's Abe is firmly committed, are edging closer to sealing a comprehensive free trade pact without the United States.

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