Japan reports a $63 billion trade surplus with the US as it talks with
Trump on tariffs
[April 17, 2025] By
YURI KAGEYAMA
TOKYO (AP) — Japan recorded a trade deficit in its March-April fiscal
year but racked up a surplus with the U.S., the Finance Ministry
reported Thursday.
Japan’s global trade deficit totaled 5.2 trillion yen ($37 billion) for
the fiscal year through March, for the fourth straight year of deficits,
according to the provisional statistics.
The surplus with the U.S. ballooned to 9 trillion yen ($63 billion).
Exports to the U.S. are a contentious issue for U.S. President Donald
Trump and Japanese negotiators are in Washington to argue their case
against higher U.S. tariffs. Japan is a key longtime U.S. ally and major
investor in the U.S., employing hundreds of thousands of Americans.
Trump said on April 2 that he planned to impose a 24% tariff on imports
from Japan as part of an announcement of higher tariffs on dozens of
countries. After financial markets panicked, he put a partial 90-day
hold on the import taxes, while increasing his already steep tariffs on
Chinese goods to as much as 145%.
Japan still faces a 10% baseline tariff and a 25% tax on imported cars,
auto parts, steel and aluminum exports. Most of those duties took effect
recently, but they pose a grave challenge for embattled Prime Minister
Shigeru Ishiba.
Some analysts say Tokyo could at some point announce surprise
concessions, like importing more American rice. Rice holds a special
place in the Japanese psyche as the nation’s staple and has long been a
protected sector in Japan. But recently a rice shortage has been pushing
up prices.
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Export vehicles are parked at Daikoku Pier in Yokohama, near Tokyo,
Tuesday, April 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Hiro Komae)

Japan’s annual exports climbed 5.9% from a year earlier, helped by
strong shipments of goods like computer chips and vehicles. Imports rose
4.7%. But a weaker Japanese yen made imports more costly.
A recent influx of foreign tourists to Japan has pushed exports higher,
since such spending counts as exports.
For the month of March, Japan recorded a trade surplus of 544 billion
yen ($4 billion). Exports climbed nearly 4% from a year earlier, for the
sixth straight month of gains, although the surge was slower than in
February.
Exports to the U.S. rose 3%, while shipments to the rest of Asia grew
5.5%. Exports to China fell, while shipments to Hong Kong, Taiwan and
South Korea surged.
“This is likely due to the rerouting of exports within Asia to avoid
tariff conflicts with the U.S.,” Min Joo Kang, a senior economist at ING,
said in a report.
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