Japan's 2011 Earthquake and Tsunami: Economic Effects and Implications for the United States

June 8, 2011 (R41702)

Contents

Figures

Tables

Appendixes

Summary

The March 11, 2011, earthquake and tsunami that occurred in Japan followed by the nuclear crisis are having a large negative impact on the economy of Japan but a lesser effect on world trade and financial markets. Japan has lost considerable physical and human capital. Physical damage has been estimated to be from $195 billion to as much as $305 billion. (Greece's GDP is $330 billion.) In excess of 23,000 persons in Japan are killed or missing, and more than 400,000 homes and other buildings have been totally or partially damaged. The negative effects of the earthquake and tsunami have been compounded by the continuing crisis at the Fukushima nuclear reactors; the resulting evacuations, radioactive contamination, and shortages of electricity; continuing aftershocks; and the extensive damage to infrastructure, homes, manufacturing plants, and other buildings.

The earthquake-related events in Japan are still unfolding, but each round of economic assessments seems more and more pessimistic. Early data indicate that the economic damage is quite severe. Japan's economy has contracted for two quarters and essentially is in recession, but it may begin to expand later in the year because of rebuilding activity. Much depends on whether the damage from the nuclear plant can be contained, the speed at which electrical capacity can be restored, and how quickly Japan's industrial base can recover. As the third-largest economy in the world, Japan's GDP at $5.5 trillion accounts for 8.7% of global GDP. The net impact of the disaster on global GDP is that it is expected to shave about a half percentage point off global economic growth with about half of that effect confined to Japan, itself.

Congressional interest on the economic side centers on humanitarian concerns, radioactive fallout reaching the United States, the impact on U.S. citizens and American companies in Japan, the effects on trade and supply chain disruptions, and increased volatility in Japanese and U.S. financial markets, interest rates, and the yen-dollar exchange rate.

The impact on U.S. imports from and exports to Japan is expected to be modest as a proportion of overall trade, but particular sectors or companies may be affected considerably. The United States already has banned imports of certain vegetables and milk from the vicinity of the damaged nuclear reactors and is monitoring other foods for radiation. Japan plays a major role in global supply chains both as a supplier of parts and as a producer of final products. In this age of just-in-time production processes, even a small disruption in the provision of a single component can wreak havoc on an entire product line. Japan's production of automobiles, semiconductors, and electronics is likely to be affected the most, but companies in the United States that rely on Japan for critical components such as electronic parts and batteries or transmissions for electrical vehicles also will be affected. Tourist travel both into and out of Japan also has been falling.

There also is concern over speculation in currency markets and repatriation of assets back to Japan that raised the value of the yen before the G-7 monetary authorities in March intervened to weaken it. Another concern is that Japan's national debt, already at 200% of GDP, will rise significantly as the government borrows to finance reconstruction. This may raise interest rates in Japan and further complicate recovery efforts or, in the worst case, trigger a sovereign debt crisis and loss of confidence in Japanese government bonds.

Legislation: H.Res. 172, S.Res. 101.


Japan's 2011 Earthquake and Tsunami: Economic Effects and Implications for the United States

Overview

The March 11, 2011, earthquake and tsunami that occurred in Japan followed by the nuclear crisis at the Fukushima Nuclear Complex, evacuations, and shortage of electricity are having a large negative economic impact on the country but a lesser effect on world markets. Japan has lost considerable physical and human capital. Physical damage has been estimated from $195 billion to as much as $305 billion,1 the latter figure being nearly four times as much as Hurricane Katrina ($81 billion) and roughly equivalent to the GDP of Greece and twice that of New Zealand. In excess of 23,000 persons in Japan are killed or missing, and more than 400,000 homes and other buildings have been totally or partially damaged.2

The earthquake-related events in Japan are still unfolding, but each round of economic assessments seems more and more pessimistic. Early data indicate that the economic damage is quite severe. Japan's economy has contracted for two quarters and essentially is in recession, but it may begin to expand later in the year because of rebuilding activity. Much depends on whether the damage from the nuclear plant can be contained, the speed at which electrical capacity can be restored, and how quickly Japan's industrial base can recover. Economic growth in 2011 is expected to be around zero with the current range of estimates between minus 1% to plus 1%. As the third-largest economy in the world, Japan's GDP at $5.5 trillion accounts for 8.7% of global GDP.

Congressional interest on the economic side centers on humanitarian concerns, radioactive fallout reaching the United States, the impact on U.S. citizens and American companies in Japan, the effects on trade and disruptions to supply chains, and increased volatility in Japanese and U.S. financial markets, interest rates, and the yen-dollar exchange rate.

The damage from the earthquake and tsunami is being compounded by the evacuations and uncertainty from the problems at the Fukushima nuclear reactors.3 Tokyo and northern Japan's power supply is experiencing a shortfall of as much as a third of peak capacity, and the electrical grid is experiencing a current shortage of as much as a quarter of capacity. The earthquake also damaged plants and equipment far from its epicenter. Port facilities, sensitive electronic equipment, 3,970 roads, and 71 bridges also were harmed. These were located in a wide area of the country that even reached Tokyo's northern suburbs. The human toll also has been great with 15,093 persons killed, 9,093 missing, and another 5,301 injured (as of May 17, 2011). In Miyagi and Fukushima prefectures, 1,669 public schools—69% of the total—were damaged or have collapsed.4 Higher radiation levels have been detected in Tokyo's water supply and a ban has been placed on shipping leafy vegetables and milk from the region of the Fukushima Nuclear Complex. On April 17, 2011, The Tokyo Electric Power Company (Tepco), the owner of the nuclear plants, announced a roadmap for ending the crisis at the nuclear plants that included from three to six months just to cool the reactors and stop the radiation leakage.5

Depending on how long the nation's electrical generating capacity is impaired, how long and how wide an area of evacuation because of radiation danger is continued, whether the nuclear reactors are brought under control, and how quickly alternative sources can be found for critical electronic and automotive parts whose production has been curtailed, the negative economic effects could grow. Larger companies in the affected area are being asked to reduce electricity usage by a quarter. In the cities, many street lights, neon signs, and hallway lights have been switched off. This contributes to the somber pall that has been cast over urban life.

In recent decades, Japan's growth rate has lagged behind that of the world, so it has not been a major contributor to global economic growth. The net impact of the disaster on global GDP, therefore, is expected to be relatively small (minus about one-half a percentage point) with about half of that effect confined to Japan, itself.

As for U.S.-Japan economic relations, it is likely that the impact of the earthquake and ensuing events on the bilateral economic relationship will be modest overall; however, the effects could be more profound in the near term and on specific sectors and firms for which trade and investment with Japan is particularly important.

Figure 1. Persons Killed, Missing, and Buildings Totally or Partially Damaged

As of May 23, 2011

Source: Underlying map from U.S. AID. Casualty and damage data from Japan, National Police Agency.

Japan plays a major role in global supply chains both as a supplier of parts and as a producer of final products. In this age of just-in-time production processes, even a small disruption in the provision of a single component can wreak havoc on an entire product line. Japan's production of automobiles, semiconductors, and electronics is likely to be affected the most, but companies in the United States that rely on Japan for critical components such as electronic parts and batteries or transmissions for electrical vehicles also will be affected. Tourist arrivals from Japan also are expected to fall as will the number of Americans visiting Japan.

U.S. imports from and exports to Japan had been temporarily slowed because of shipping bottlenecks and the nature of the disaster. In the medium term, a slowdown in growth in Japan is likely to reduce U.S. exports there, but eventually rebuilding will require large amounts of construction supplies. If imports of certain products from Japan become scarce, China, South Korea, or other nations may gain at Japan's expense. Trade data for Japan are presented in the Appendix to this report.

Figure 2. A Tug Boat among Debris in Ofunato, Japan

Source: U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Matthew M. Bradley.

Currently, it appears that radioactive contamination of seafood from the recent nuclear disaster in Japan is not a food safety problem for consumers in the United States.6 The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has banned imports of spinach and kakina from the four Japanese prefectures of Fukushima, Ibaraki, Tochigi, and Gunma and milk from Fukushima prefecture only. All milk and milk products and vegetables and fruits produced or manufactured from the four Japanese prefectures affected are to be detained upon entry into the United States and not allowed to enter the U.S. food supply unless shown to be free from radionuclide contamination.7 The European Union, Australia, China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, South Korea, Philippines, Singapore, India, Brazil, and Canada have required increased surveillance of food products from Japan. Some have banned food from the prefectures most affected. At many Chinese ports, Japanese ships with food cargo are being denied customs inspections.8

International shipping companies reportedly are charging higher rates for calling at Japanese ports. Premiums being required by ship owners to enter Japanese ports can be from $147,000 to $588,000.9

The debris washed out to sea from the tsunami is being picked up by Pacific Ocean currents and is projected to spread eastward from Japan and in about three years likely will reach the U.S. West Coast. If so, this would wash debris onto California beaches and the beaches of British Columbia, Alaska, and Baja California.10

Figure 3. Debris from Japan's Earthquake and Tsunami

Source: U.S. Navy Photo by Mass Communication Specialist Alexander Tidd.

The value of the yen has been increasing, prompting coordinated intervention by the G-7 countries (Group of Seven Industrial nations) to halt excessive yen appreciation. A repatriation of assets back to Japan may put upward pressure both on the yen and on U.S. interest rates if Japanese investors sell U.S. Treasury and other securities, but analysts expect that over time eventually the damage from the disaster will weaken the yen.

The questions going forward include whether Japan's debt burden will leave it unable to secure the funds needed for rebuilding; whether the disaster has fundamentally altered the Japanese economy and the competitive position of its industries relative to those in China, South Korea, and other nations; what the impact will be on energy markets and the nuclear industry in Japan and the world; how Japan and other countries should cope with large inflows of "hot money" that can distort exchange rates; whether global supply chains can adjust to the loss of supply from Japan; and how quickly Japan can regain its economic activity and rebuild its capital stock.

Since Japan has a history of severe earthquakes, its citizens and companies have made considerable preparations and have recovered from previous disasters. The January 1995 Kobe earthquake (6.8 magnitude) hit a region that was heavily industrialized and densely populated and caused about $100 billion in damage. The immediate effect was a contraction in Japan's economy of 2.6% but a recovery that began the following month.11 The Kobe quake, however, did not trigger a tsunami, a nuclear crisis, or severe shortages of electricity.

Economic Impact

Figure 4. Tsunami Damage to Seafood Cultivation in Japan

Source: NIKKEI.com

The direct damage from Japan's earthquake and tsunami has been concentrated in the northern region of the country, some distance from Japan's industrial heartland. The financial and economic effects, however, are spreading through the Japanese economy, the East Asian region, and also may affect businesses and consumers in the United States. The effect of the record 9.0 earthquake was compounded by the ensuing tsunami that swept as far as 6 miles inland in Japan, causing widespread destruction, and that spread out across the Pacific. It caused tens of millions of dollars of damage in Hawaii, as much as $40 million in damage in California, and millions of dollars of damage primarily to harbors and boats in Oregon. As shown in Figure 4, the tsunami also destroyed or damaged aquaculture facilities in prefectures quite distant from the epicenter. The damage, furthermore, has been compounded by the nuclear contamination from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Plant plus a shortage of gasoline and of electricity that has caused rolling blackouts in Japan's industrial centers. In mid-April, Japan's oil refining capacity was basically restored.

Japan's economic growth, already anemic because of the global recession in 2008-2009, is expected to drop into negative territory for a quarter or two but turn positive again as the crisis passes and rebuilding commences. As the extent of the damage becomes more apparent, forecasts for Japan's economic growth are becoming more and more pessimistic. Initial expectations were that the disaster would shave 0.2 to 0.5 percentage points off total GDP growth in 2011, but that growth still would be around 1%. By March 23, an estimate by IHS Global Insight was for growth in 2011 to be 0.5%, then by May 9, the projected growth was 0.0% with reconstruction in 2012 increasing the rate to about 3.6%.12 (See Figure 5.) Morgan Stanley, however, expects a short and deep recession in Japan with the economy shrinking by 1% to 3% in 2011 and a reduction in global growth of about 0.5 percentage points.13 The Economist Intelligence Unit sees a recovery from the recession in the first and second quarters of 2011 for an overall 2011 growth rate of 1.0%.14

Figure 5. Japan's Quarterly Growth Rate in Real GDP

Source: CRS. Underlying data from IHS Global Insight. Japan—Interim Quarterly Forecast, updated April 14, 2011.

Manufacturing

Typically, the negative effects of a natural disaster are large immediately after the event and are mostly concentrated in the region of the disaster. In Japan's case, however, the negative impact is greater because the estimated $309 billion (5.7% of GDP and less than 2% of capital stock)15 or more in damage from the combination of the earthquake and tsunami is being compounded by the evacuations and uncertainty from the problems at the Fukushima nuclear reactors, the shortfall in electricity, and a scarcity of gasoline that is gradually being remedied.

In addition to the nuclear plants destroyed, other generating plants are expected to remain offline until repairs are made and safety ensured. Of Tokyo Electric Power Company's 17 nuclear reactors, 13 are currently off line as are 4 nuclear plants belonging to another company servicing the same region. Even the plants not damaged extensively are not expected to come back on line until after August 2011. This has caused serious shortages of electricity in northeastern Japan that still remain despite the darkened street lights in Tokyo, more self-generating capacity being installed in factories, a rush on purchases of solar cells, and emergency generating capacity being shipped in from other countries. Japan's situation also is unusual because when the first electrical generators were imported, the German generators installed in Tokyo and points east produced electricity of 50 hertz while the American generators in Kyoto and west produced current of 60 hertz. Presently, only 1,000 megawatts exist in capacity to convert the electricity in the west to that in the east.16 The electricity shortage has caused rolling blackouts lasting as long as three to four hours at a time that has disrupted Japan's production capacity in its industrial heartland farther south in the Tokyo-Osaka corridor. While the visual images mainly have been of the tsunami and its aftermath, the earthquake also damaged plants and equipment far from its epicenter. Port facilities,17 sensitive electronic equipment, 3,970 roads, and 71 bridges also were harmed. These were located in a wide area of the country that even reached Tokyo's northern suburbs.18

In addition to the casualties, the toll on life also has been great. An estimated 140,000 people have been evacuated from the affected areas and 117,085 people were still living in evacuation shelters as of May 10, 2011. The 6,000 homes still standing after the quake and tsunami but without electricity are expected to have power restored by the end of May, and 77,500 homes are still without water (as of May 6).19

The three prefectures in eastern Tohoku that took the brunt of the earthquake and tsunami account for about 6% to 7% of Japan's GDP. The city of Sendai, with a population of roughly 1 million, is in the middle of an agricultural region, but it still has a considerable number of industrial facilities. The villages most damaged by the tsunami were engaged primarily in fishing, but manufacturing accounts for about a quarter of production in the region,20 and plants in the most severely damaged areas supply parts and products used in manufacturing elsewhere in Japan. As of March 16, 2011, all 12 automakers in Japan reportedly had temporarily stopped production at some plants. Companies such as Hitachi (equipment for power plants), Renesas Electronics (semiconductors), NEC (electronics), Sony (electronics), and Fujitsu (computers) also had suspended operations at certain plants in the affected area.21 Japan also supplies parts for manufacturing in China, South Korea, and other Asian countries. As of March 25, Japanese oil refiners had restored capacity in three of the six refineries that had halted production. The refineries restarted accounted for 17% of Japan's domestic capacity and left 14% of refining capacity still down. However, since other refineries had been operating at below capacity, some production is expected to be covered by other plants.22

Some Business Disruptions

  • A Hitachi factory north of Tokyo that makes 60% of the world's supply of airflow sensors was shut down. This caused General Motors to shut a plant in Shreveport, LA, for a week and Peugeot-Citroen to cut back production at most of its European plants.
  • Two Japanese plants accounting for 25% of the world's supply of silicon wafers for computer chips were closed.
  • IHI Corp. is restarting full production at its plant in Soma, Fukushima Prefecture. The plant supplies parts to General Electric for aircraft engines that are used in Boeing airplanes.
  • Renesas Electronics suspended output at a key semiconductor plant. Renesas holds a market-leading global share of 30% in microcontrollers. This is affecting manufacturers of mobile phones, home appliances, and elevators.
  • A Toshiba plant making liquid crystal displays was damaged.
  • Texas Instruments had to close a factory in Japan (until September 2011) accounting for about 10% of its revenues.
  • Sony Corp. temporarily closed seven damaged plants making high definition magnetic tapes, digital video discs, lithium batteries, semiconductor lasers, and optical devices. The company also suspended operations in three other plants because of electricity shortages.
  • Hitachi Vehicle Energy, Ltd. announced it intended to resume production on March 28 of lithium ion car batteries at its Ibaraki prefecture facility.
  • Nippon Chemi-Con Corp., the largest producer of aluminum electrolytic capacitors used in everything from computers to industrial equipment, had four Japanese factories down. It intended to boost production at 10 overseas bases, including factories in Indonesia, Malaysia, and China.
  • Nihon Dempa Kogyo, the second-largest maker of quartz components (with a roughly 20% share of the global market), is turning to operations in Malaysia and elsewhere to compensate for damage at its plant in northern Japan which assembles components for automotive applications.
  • Nissan in Japan is considering importing engines from its plant in Tennessee because its engine factory in Fukushima prefecture has been damaged.
  • Japan's major automakers are expected to produce about 400,000 fewer vehicles domestically as a result of the earthquake and tsunami.
  • Delta Airlines, the largest foreign carrier in Japan, is cutting capacity to and through its Tokyo hub by 15% to 20% through May and expects the crisis in Japan to reduce profits in 2011 by $250 million to $400 million.
  • Sources: Various news articles and press releases.

Financial and Currency Markets

For the U.S. economy, the disaster in Japan came on top of the turmoil in the Middle East, rising oil and food prices, and a weak recovery with unemployment hovering at 9%. It has added new uncertainty to markets already under stress. The first effects have been financial as values on stock markets dropped and paper values shrunk. Equity markets, however, have been recovering as the impact of a disaster is factored into risk calculations and the economic effects become more clear. Still the situation in Japan has added to instability in financial markets in the United States and the world.

The value of the yen and interest rates also are being affected. Investors, hedge funds, and speculators have bought yen in anticipation that Japan's wealth holders, insurance companies, and possibly the government will have to repatriate overseas investments in order to finance insurance payouts and rebuilding. The value of the yen (83.8 yen per dollar on February 15, 2011, and 122 yen per dollar less than four years ago) touched a record 76.25 yen per dollar on March 17 before retreating to the 80 yen level after the Group of Seven (G-7) Industrial Nations agreed to "cooperate as appropriate" to address excessive and volatile movements in the foreign exchange market (in other words, to intervene to weaken the value of the yen). This decision was made by monetary authorities in Japan, the United States, the eurozone, Canada, and Britain.23 Since then the yen has been regaining strength and on May 20 was 81.7 yen per dollar. Japan's Ministry of Finance has argued that Japan's life and casualty insurers already have secured considerable funding and intend to tap domestic markets rather than repatriating funds from overseas and that the strength of the yen was due to speculation.24 Any yen appreciation that does occur would make Japanese exports less competitive in U.S. markets and U.S. exports more competitive in Japanese markets. In addition, since China's yuan has been linked closely to the value of the dollar, Chinese exporters are likely to gain further price competitiveness relative to those from Japan.

Figure 6. Yen/Dollar Exchange Rate

(yen per dollar)

Source: CRS. Underlying data from PACIFIC Exchange Rate Service.

Approximately a quarter of developing East Asia's long-term debt is denominated in yen. For China, 8% of its external government debt is in yen. The figure for Thailand is about 60%, for Vietnam about 35%, for the Philippines about 32%, and for Indonesia about 30%. A 1% appreciation in the value of the yen translates into a $250 million increase in annual debt servicing on yen-denominated securities by East Asia's developing countries.25

Another question deals with the impact on U.S. interest rates and how they might be affected by changes in capital flows to and from Japan. Japanese investors are major private foreign holders of U.S. Treasury securities that finance the U.S. national debt, and their importance has soared over the last few years. At the end of March 2011, Japanese residents held $908 billion in U.S. securities. At one time, Japanese investors were the largest foreign holders of U.S. Treasury securities, but beginning in September 2008, residents in China surpassed them and, as of the end of March 2011, held $1,145 billion in U.S. Treasury securities.26 Japanese holdings of U.S. Treasury securities underscore the debtor/creditor link between the United States and Japan. As the U.S. government continues to incur budget deficits and maintains a low national savings rate, the United States has had to rely increasingly on foreign creditors to finance the rising national debt. Some analysts have suggested that Japanese private and government investors in U.S. Treasury securities may have to slow down or diminish their holdings to finance reconstruction operations in Japan. Such a move could increase the interest rates that the U.S. government must pay to finance its debt. Other analysts have suggested such an impact would be limited as Japan should have sufficient domestic capital to cover the extra expenses. As the disaster developed, the flight to the safety of U.S. Treasury securities by investors all over the world more than offset any repatriation of funds back to Japan.

The Bank of Japan has been injecting funds into the banking system to ensure that there would be no shortage of cash or funds to lend and no spikes in Japan's interest rates. As of March 17, the bank had made liquidity injections of $418 billion (33 trillion yen) into financial markets. This far exceeded the 4.5 trillion yen injected after the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008.27

Figure 7. A Damaged Water Pipe Shoots into the Air, Hachinohe, Japan

Source: U.S. Navy photo by Chief Mass Communication Specialist Daniel Sanford.

In Japan, a concern is that the public debt, at about 200% of GDP, has become so high that borrowing to finance reconstruction could trigger a loss of confidence in the ability of the Japanese government to repay its debts. In such a case, Japan could face a sovereign debt crisis similar to that faced by Greece. Prior to the earthquake, in January 2011, Standard & Poor's, the credit ratings agency, had already downgraded Japan's long-term sovereign debt to AA- from AA. This is three levels below the highest possible rating. This was S&P's first downgrade of Japanese government debt since 2002.28 When Greece faced a sovereign crisis in 2010, its national debt was 123% of GDP. In Japan's case, however, 95% of its national debt is owned by Japanese citizens, not foreign hedge and other funds. According to one analyst, it is unlikely that those citizens would dump their bond holdings if the government takes on more debt to rebuild the area struck by the earthquake and tsunami. Financially, Japan's government appears to have more maneuvering room than might seem apparent by the debt ratios.29

On May 2, 2011, the first FY2011 supplementary budget bill for recovery and reconstruction from what the Japanese government is calling the Great East Japan Earthquake passed the Diet. The budget totaling 4.0 trillion yen ($49 billion) is to be financed by using a part of the contingency funds meant for economic crises, diverting basic pension funds, reviewing highway toll rates and other means. The government and a union representing central government employees have agreed to cut monthly salaries by 5% to 10% and bonuses by 10% to help secure funds for reconstruction.30 The funds in the bill are to be used for reconstructing roads and fishing ports, disposing of debris, constructing temporary housing, and other purposes.31

A key goal of the government is to build temporary housing for the thousands still in shelters. An estimated 30,000 homes are to be completed by the end of May 2011. By the end of August, it is hoped that temporary housing will be available for everyone who needs it, and evacuation shelters can be closed.32

Most insurance payments are expected to be borne primarily by Japanese insurance companies and their government. Insurance companies everywhere, however, pass some of their risk exposure onto global reinsurance providers. One estimate values the insured damage from the earthquake and subsequent fires at $11 billion to $21 billion. The damage from the tsunami added another $8 billion to $9.7 billion for a combined total of approximately $20 billion to $30 billion.33 Even property insurance claims of $50 billion, however, would be equivalent only to about 10% of Japan's insurance premium income and less than 1% of insurance company assets.34 Not included are insured production losses and claims related to nuclear contamination. Japanese insurers jointly own a reinsurer, the Japan Earthquake Reinsurance Company, which in turn is backstopped by the Japanese government. Ultimately, the government stands as the insurer of last resort in the case of earthquakes. As for individual homeowners, most tend not to carry earthquake or flood insurance. Household rebuilding, therefore, is likely to come out of household savings, some of which has been invested overseas.

As of April 6, 2011, earthquake insurance payments stemming from the March 11 quake reached 33.4 billion yen (about $402 million) on 31,627 cases. Most of these payments were for damage in the Tokyo area because the amounts for payments for the devastation in the areas around Sendai worst hit by the quake were yet to be determined.35

Figure 8. Aerial View of Minato, Japan, a Week After the Tsunami

Source: U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Ethan Johnson.

Implications for the U.S.-Japan Economic Relationship

The U.S.-Japan economic relationship is very strong and mutually advantageous. The two economies are integrated via trade in goods and services—they are important markets for each other's exports and important sources of imports. Japan and the United States are also connected via capital flows. Japan is a major foreign source of financing of the U.S. national debt and will likely remain so for the foreseeable future, as the mounting U.S. debt needs to be financed and the stock of U.S. domestic savings remains insufficient to meet the demand. Japan is also a significant source of foreign private portfolio and direct investment in the United States, and the United States is the origin of much of the foreign investment in Japan.

Japan and the United States remain important trading partners to one another; however, their relative importance has declined over the years as other trading partners have increased their importance. In 1996, Japan accounted for 10.8% of U.S. exports and 14.8% of imports, but for only 4.7% of U.S. exports and 6.3% of U.S imports by 2010. In 1996, the United States accounted for 27.2% % of Japanese exports and 22.7% of Japanese imports, but for only 15.4% of Japanese exports and 9.7% of Japanese imports by 2010. The diminished importance has been the result in part of the development of international production networks and the segmentation of production processes across countries giving rise to China as a important trading partner for both the United States and Japan.

An important factor in determining the volume of trade flows is the relative growth rates in each of the trading partners. For example, in 2009, both U.S. exports to Japan and imports from Japan declined substantially, reflecting the effects of the global economic downturn. The crisis was particularly hard on a Japan that was trying to recover from more than a decade and a half of economic stagnation. In 2010, U.S.-Japan trade showed signs of recovery as both the U.S. and Japanese economies grew, 2.9% and 4.0%, respectively.36 If, as expected, the Japanese economy experiences slower economic growth as a result of the earthquake-related crisis, U.S. exports could decline, depending on the extent of the impact. A major portion of U.S. exports to Japan consists of optical and medical equipment; computers and components; semiconductors; and agricultural products, such as meat and wheat. Many economists expect Japanese economic growth to rise as the country begins to recover from the damage.37

Increasingly, international trade results from the segmentation of production processes that take place within transnational supply chains. On the one hand, such transnational production networks can result in more efficient production and lower costs; on the other hand, any disruptions within the chain can halt production down the line. One possible, albeit incomplete, indicator of the role of supply chains in U.S.-Japan trade is the amount of that trade that is in intermediate goods—that is goods that are used in the making of final goods. In 2010, 55.3% of U.S. exports were in intermediate goods (capital goods, except automotive; industrial supplies and materials); 48.9% of U.S. imports from Japan were in intermediate goods.

Some sectors of U.S.-Japan trade are likely to be affected. For example, close to 35% of U.S. imports from Japan in 2010 consisted of passenger cars and auto parts. Some Japanese auto manufacturers, such as Toyota Motor Corp., have assembly operations in the immediate vicinity of the earthquake. Other manufacturers who may not be directly located in the earthquake area have been affected by power outages and other effects of the disaster and have had to curtail operations, reducing output. Japanese auto manufacturers have also been adversely affected by disruption of operations of parts suppliers.38

In addition, U.S.-based auto manufacturers may also be affected by the problems in Japan. Some Japanese-owned companies in the United States have had to curtail operations because they cannot obtain parts from Japan. For example, some models assembled in the United States by Toyota, Mitsubishi, Nissan, and Mazda import engines and/or transmissions from Japan.39 Also, some U.S.-name plate manufacturers have been affected. For example, Ford Motor Co. depends on imports of Japanese-made memory chips and batteries. In addition, a significant portion of U.S. imports from Japan are in machinery (20.6%), including printers and computers, and electrical machinery (15.2%), including semiconductors, shipments of which could be interrupted because of the crisis. The full extent of the effects of the problems in Japan is yet to be determined.40

In 2010, Japanese suppliers accounted for more than one-fifth of global semiconductor production, and companies headquartered in Japan generated $63.3 billion in microchip revenue. This represented 20.8% of the worldwide market. Not all of the actual production, however, is located in Japan.41

Tourism also is likely to be affected. Hawaii already has experienced cancellations of tours from Japan. Japanese tourists accounted for $1.9 billion in revenue in Hawaii, 18% of tourist arrivals there, and numbered second only to arrivals from other parts of the United States.42 For the United States as a whole, about 3.5 million tourists from Japan arrived in 2010, placing Japan in fourth place after Canada, Mexico, and the United Kingdom.43

The Obama Administration has engaged in discussions with Japan regarding the possibility of Japan joining negotiations to establish the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) Initiative. Before the March 11 earthquake, the government of Prime Minister Kan indicated it would make a decision on TPP by this June. However, some members of the Japanese Diet have indicated that that decision may have to be delayed as a result of the disaster.44

In addition to trade, an important U.S.-Japan economic link is foreign direct investments (FDI), that is, investments in plants, firms, and real estate that signify a long-term commitment:

Many of these foreign direct investments generate trade and employment:

Agriculture and Food45

The widespread devastation from the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami affected many agricultural and fishery areas in Japan. Japan's assessment of the damages to the fisheries, agriculture, and forestry sectors from the March 2011 earthquake is currently estimated at $21.5 billion.46 Of this estimated total, $11.0 billion is attributed to losses in Japan's fisheries sector, along with $9.1 billion in damages to agricultural lands and crops, and another $1.4 billion in damages to forested lands and facilities.

Damages to agricultural crops, land, and facilities have been reported in several prefectures, including Aomori, Iwate, Miyagi, Akita, Yamagata, Fukushima, Ibaraki, Tochigi, Gunma, Saitama, Chiba, Kanagawa, Yamanashi, Nagano, Niigata, and Mie, among others.47 Damages to the agriculture sector cover nearly 4,700 farmland areas and about 16,400 food facilities. Among fisheries, "catastrophic damages" to fish vessels and harbor facilities have been reported in Iwate, Miyagi, and Fukushima prefectures; other damages to fishing vessels and harbor facilities were also reported in Hokkaido, Aomori, Ibaraki, Chiba, Kanagawa, Shizuoka, Aichi, Mie, Wakayama, Tokushima, Kochi, Oita, Miyazaki, Kagoshima, and Okinawa prefectures, and in Tokyo Metropolitan.48 Damages to aquaculture facilities were reported in Toyama, Ishikawa, Shizuoka, and Tottori prefectures. Damages to the fisheries sector cover damage to more than 20,700 fishing vessels and 319 fishery harbor facilities.

A compilation by USDA of cropland production statistics in the five coastal prefectures—Aomori, Iwate, Miyagi, Fukushima, and Ibaraki—indicate the importance of these prefectures to Japan's agricultural sector.49 USDA's summary, using 2007 production data, shows that these five prefectures account for about one-fifth of Japan's total marine fisheries and aquaculture production by volume, and 17% of all agricultural output by volume. These areas also account for similar shares of the nation's rice, soybeans, vegetables, and livestock production, and also house 19% of Japan's hog production, about one-tenth of all cattle and dairy herds, and about one-fifth of its poultry flocks.

Japan's agricultural and fisheries industries account for a small share (less than 2%) of its total yearly GDP; however, these industries remain an important aspect of the country's overall economy and governmental policies. Agricultural output, measured at the farm level, totals about $70 billion annually.50 The value of Japan's fisheries accounts for another $14 billion.51 Principal food commodities produced in Japan include fish and seafood, rice, vegetables, fruits and nuts, and dairy and poultry products.52 Japan remains a net food importer. Imports of agricultural and fisheries products totaled $59.3 billion in 2010.53 Nearly half of the value of Japan's food imports consisted of fish and meat products. Other imports include grains and bakery goods (23% of total value), and vegetables and fruits (8%). The United States was the leading supplier, accounting for about one fourth of food imports ($14.1 billion in 2010). Japan's food exports totaled $4.7 billion in 2010. Leading Japanese food exports included fish and other animal products (about 40%); processed foods, bakery products, and grains (about 15%); beverages (8%); and other miscellaneous products.

The Japanese government has been monitoring possible radioactive contamination of plant and animal products and tap water in some of the coastal prefectures as well as southern prefectures near the disabled Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Plant. Testing has been conducted nearly daily since March 19, 2011, to detect possible radioactive contaminants on a wide range of plant and animal products, including fish.54 Testing for radioactive contaminants in foods is ongoing and spans many adjacent prefectures.

The Japanese government has taken action to restrict the distribution of potentially contaminated foods. Starting in late March 2011, Japan's Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare made a series of announcements restricting the distribution and consumption of foods produced in certain prefectures, including "non-head type leafy vegetables and head type leafy vegetables" (such as spinach, komatsuna, cabbages) and any "flowerhead brassicas" (broccoli, cauliflower),55 and restrictions on spinach and kakina (a leafy vegetable), fresh raw milk,56 certain shitake mushrooms,57 and bamboo shoots and ostrich fern.58 Many of these restrictions were later lifted.59 By late April, the ministry had placed restrictions on the distribution and consumption of juvenile sand lance (a marine fish of the family Ammodytidae) harvested at Fukushima prefecture.60

Following these reports, many countries increased their surveillance of food imports from Japan, including the European Union, Australia, China, Hong Kong, South Korea, Philippines, Singapore, India, and Canada, among others.

In the United States, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued FDA issued "Import Alert 99-33" for milk, vegetables, and certain fish species (sand lance) produced or manufactured in selected Japanese prefectures.61 This import alert has been modified several times.62 As of May 17, 2011, FDA's Import Alert 99-33 has reduced the area of concern to three prefectures—Fukushima, Ibaraki, and Tochigi—and applies to food products from Japan across four categories.63 FDA's Import Alert 99-33 establishes an order for "detention without physical examination" (DWPE) for specified products from specified prefectures. Accordingly, FDA's import alert detains all shipments of items subject to the alert, and places the burden upon the importer to demonstrate, through testing, that a given shipment is "not violative" and may be imported.64 U.S. food imports are regulated by FDA, which monitors the safety of most types of food imports, and USDA's Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS), which regulates the safety of meat and poultry imports.65

Some in Congress have indicated concern that radioactive contaminated foods might enter the U.S. through its food imports.66 Both FDA and USDA have issued formal statements regarding the current situation in Japan.67 FDA has stated: "FDA's screening at U.S. borders will remain vigilant and will be augmented with radiation screening of shipments" and its import tracking system "has been programmed to automatically flag all shipments of FDA-regulated products from Japan." USDA has stated that "USDA and its federal partners through the Food Emergency Response Network are preparing to begin sampling, if necessary." Existing U.S. trade laws, including the Tariff Act of 1930 (19 U.S.C. 1304), generally require all imported articles to be marked with the English name of the country of origin. Various other country-of-origin labeling requirements also apply under other laws that govern FDA and USDA68 and other USDA programs.69 Several international organizations, including organizations within the United Nations, are monitoring international concerns over the safety of food produced in Japan.70

Many U.S. and international industry sources have indicated that the current situation in Japan might cause disruption in global food markets, but also have indicated the likelihood that Japanese demand for imported food might increase. Historically, Japan has been an important trading partner with the United States, and is our fourth-largest agricultural export market. It is still not clear what effect, if any, Japan's food supply and demand situation will have on world farm commodity markets and food prices.

Legislative Activity

H.Res. 172 (Honda). Expressing heartfelt condolences and support for assistance to the people of Japan and all those affected in the aftermath of the deadly earthquake and tsunamis of March 11, 2011.

S.Res. 101 (Reid) A resolution expressing the sense of the Senate relating to the March 11, 2011, earthquake and tsunami in Japan. Passed by unanimous consent in the Senate on March 14, 2011.

Appendix.

Table A-1. Japan's Top Merchandise Exports by Market Country

(millions of current U.S. dollars)

 

 

 

 

 

% Share

Rank

Country

2008

2009

2010

2008

2009

2010

0

—World—

781,952.3

580,465.4

770,112.2

100.0

100.0

100.0

1

China

124,952.2

109,576.6

149,692.3

16.0

18.9

19.4

2

United States

137,306.0

93,624.2

118,798.2

17.6

16.1

15.4

3

Korea, South

59,418.2

47,217.0

62,299.1

7.6

8.1

8.1

4

Taiwan

46,033.6

36,409.8

52,474.2

5.9

6.3

6.8

5

Hong Kong

40,280.6

31,858.7

42,315.2

5.2

5.5

5.5

6

Thailand

29,491.5

22,247.9

34,235.6

3.8

3.8

4.5

7

Singapore

26,627.5

20,694.3

25,236.7

3.4

3.6

3.3

8

Germany

23,984.3

16,646.2

20,445.2

3.1

2.9

2.7

9

Malaysia

16,436.8

12,859.1

17,643.1

2.1

2.2

2.3

10

Netherlands

21,077.0

13,512.5

16,399.5

2.7

2.3

2.1

Source: Japan Customs, via Global Trade Atlas.

Note: Countries ranked by trade value in 2010.

Table A-2. Japan's Top Merchandise Imports From Source Countries

(millions of current U.S. dollars)

 

 

 

 

 

% Share

Rank

Country

2008

2009

2010

2008

2009

2010

0

—World—

762,487.7

551,787.9

692,844.6

100.0

100.0

100.0

1

China

143,657.2

122,514.5

153,370.1

18.8

22.2

22.1

2

United States

77,666.9

58,959.1

67,400.1

10.2

10.7

9.7

3

Australia

47,677.2

34,729.6

44,805.6

6.3

6.3

6.5

4

Saudi Arabia

50,840.8

29,192.0

35,890.3

6.7

5.3

5.2

5

United Arab Emirates

46,759.0

22,713.8

29,280.6

6.1

4.1

4.2

6

Korea, South

29,500.7

21,977.6

28,641.8

3.9

4.0

4.1

7

Indonesia

32,555.1

21,810.6

28,113.8

4.3

4.0

4.1

8

Taiwan

21,824.6

18,336.6

23,073.8

2.9

3.3

3.3

9

Malaysia

23,241.2

16,726.6

22,708.1

3.1

3.0

3.3

10

Qatar

26,422.4

15,924.2

21,697.0

3.5

2.9

3.1

Source: Japan Customs, via Global Trade Atlas.

Note: Countries ranked by import value in 2010.

Table A-3. Japan's Top Surplus Balance Countries

(millions of current U.S. dollars)

 Rank

 Country

2008

2009

2010

0

—World—

19,464.6

28,677.5

77,267.5

1

United States

59,639.1

34,665.0

51,398.1

2

Hong Kong

38,718.8

30,760.4

40,794.9

3

Korea, South

29,917.6

25,239.4

33,657.4

4

Taiwan

24,209.0

18,073.2

29,400.4

5

Singapore

18,734.8

14,589.1

17,081.3

6

Panama

10,952.7

12,641.4

15,004.8

7

Thailand

8,678.5

6,225.0

13,210.8

8

Netherlands

17,255.2

10,055.1

12,445.4

9

United Kingdom

8,974.6

6,123.4

7,874.2

10

Mexico

6,137.0

4,037.7

5,979.6

Source: Japan Customs, via Global Trade Atlas.

Note: Countries ranked by 2010 balance data.

Table A-4. Japan's Top Deficit Balance Countries

(millions of current U.S. dollars)

Rank

Country

2008

2009

2010

1

Saudi Arabia

-42,941.6

-23,801.2

-29,407.0

2

Australia

-30,389.3

-22,548.7

-28,960.7

3

United Arab Emirates

-35,872.2

-16,222.6

-21,946.9

4

Qatar

-24,391.2

-14,295.9

-20,555.9

5

Indonesia

-19,947.6

-12,481.7

-12,192.0

6

Iran

-16,336.0

-7,655.0

-9,080.2

7

Kuwait

-13,117.7

-7,744.6

-8,870.8

8

Russia

3,112.3

-5,560.9

-8,100.3

9

Malaysia

-6,804.4

-3,867.5

-5,065.0

10

Chile

-5,166.4

-3,954.9

-4,849.5

Source: Japan Customs, via Global Trade Atlas.

Note: Countries ranked by 2010 balance values.

Table A-5. World Top Five Exporting and Importing Countries

(Merchandise trade, all commodities, calendar years 2008-2010)

Top Five Reporting Countries' Exports with World, Ranked by 2010 Exports

Country

Millions of Current U.S. Dollars

% Change

% of Total

2008

2009

2010

2010/2009

2010

World Total

15,426,934

11,794,981

12,592,915

6.8

100.0

China

1,428,319

1,201,663

1,577,941

31.3

12.5

USA

1,287,442

1,056,043

1,277,504

21.0

10.1

Germany

1,448,973

1,120,639

1,268,890

13.2

10.1

Japan

781,952

580,465

770,112

32.7

6.1

Netherlands

638,503

498,503

573,352

15.0

4.6

 

 

 

 

 

 

Top Five Reporting Countries' Imports from World, Ranked by 2010 Imports

Country

Millions of Current U.S. Dollars

% Change

% of Total

2008

2009

2010

2010/2009

2010

World Total

15,950,342

12,041,608

12,854,666

6.8

100.0

USA

2,103,641

1,559,625

1,912,092

22.6

14.9

China

1,133,388

1,005,555

1,394,813

38.7

10.9

Germany

1,185,536

925,833

1,066,723

15.2

8.3

Japan

762,488

551,788

692,845

25.6

5.4

France

716,502

559,895

606,168

8.3

4.7

Source: CRS with National Trade Reporting Agencies, via Global Trade Atlas.

Notes: Statistics based on countries reporting as of 3/22/2011.

Table A-6. Monthly Japanese Merchandise Trade Data with Top Partner Countries

(Through April 2011, in millions of U.S. dollars)

Japanese Exports to Top Market Countries

Partner Country

Nov. 2010

Dec. 2010

Jan. 2011

Feb. 2011

Mar. 2011

Apr. 2011

—World—

65, 948

73,340

60,155

67,715

71,788

61,996

China

13,218

15,421

11,233

14,103

14,796

12,882

United States

10,544

11,642

9,110

10,320

10,143

8,066

Korea, South

5,100

5,586

5,081

5,239

6,020

5,777

Taiwan

4,322

4,755

4,017

4,348

4,779

4,430

Hong Kong

3,436

4,152

2,927

3,204

3,956

3,418

Thailand

2,979

3,213

2,838

3,051

3,185

3,120

Singapore

2,362

2,148

2,039

2,090

2,292

2,052

Panama

986

1,257

1,729

850

1,648

1,211

Germany

1,888

1,968

1,682

1,882

1,966

1,763

Malaysia

1,420

1,793

1,409

1,508

1,635

1,545

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Japanese Imports from Top Source Countries

Partner Country

Nov. 2010

Dec. 2010

Jan. 2011

Feb. 2011

Mar. 2011

Apr. 2011

—World—

64,038

64,706

65,957

59,836

69,505

67,584

China

15,098

14,330

14,959

11,152

15,637

14,182

United States

6,205

5,672

5,635

5,524

6,052

6,101

Australia

4,394

4,214

4,161

3,520

4,309

4,068

Saudi Arabia

3,144

3,662

3,947

3,961

4,443

3,743

United Arab Emirates

2,577

3,124

3,116

3,183

3,310

3,607

Korea, South

2,863

2,857

2,977

2,715

3,087

3,329

Indonesia

2,457

2,712

2,671

2,645

2,941

2,708

Malaysia

2,068

2,212

2,190

2,205

2,534

2,529

Qatar

2,123

1,897

2,060

2,035

2,307

2,442

Taiwan

1,963

1,812

1,943

1,703

1,965

1,895

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Japanese Balance with Top Surplus Trade Partners

Partner Country

Nov. 2010

Dec. 2010

Jan. 2011

Feb. 2011

Mar. 2011

Apr. 2011

—World

1,911

8,634

-5,802

7,879

2,282

-5,589

Hong Kong

3,308

4,009

2,798

3,093

3,769

3,321

Korea, South

2,237

2,729

2,104

2,524

2,932

2,447

Taiwan

2,358

2,943

2,074

2,645

2,814

2,534

United States

4,339

5,970

3,475

4,796

4,091

1,965

Singapore

1,716

1,447

1,364

1,477

1,615

1,364

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Japanese Balance with Top Deficit Trade Partners

Partner Country

Nov. 2010

Dec. 2010

Jan. 2011

Feb. 2011

Mar. 2011

Apr. 2011

—World—

1,911

8,634

-5,802

7,879

2,282

-5,589

Saudi Arabia

-2,683

-2,902

-3,536

-3,378

-3,827

-3,448

Australia

-3,132

-2,900

-3,006

-2,156

-3,152

-3,321

United Arab Emirates

-1,999

-2,468

-2,652

-2,547

-2,674

-3,212

Qatar

-2,053

-1,832

-1,997

-1,944

-2,238

-2,404

China

-1,879

1,090

-3,727

2,951

-841

-1,300

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, U.S. Census Bureau, via Global Trade Atlas.

Table A-7. Monthly U.S. Merchandise Trade Data With Top Partner Countries

(Through January 2011, in millions of U.S. dollars)

United States: Exports to Top Market Countries

Rank

Country

Sep-10

Oct-10

Nov-10

Dec-10

Jan-11

0

—World—

107,789

117,596

112,948

116,990

110,243

1

Canada

21,883

22,193

20,989

20,441

20,675

2

Mexico

14,008

15,353

14,840

14,520

14,840

3

China

7,168

9,303

9,481

10,121

8,078

4

Japan

4,979

5,551

5,221

5,460

4,993

5

Germany

4,110

4,373

4,566

4,098

3,648

6

United Kingdom

3,940

4,273

3,858

4,163

4,136

7

Netherlands

3,146

3,387

3,266

3,290

3,164

8

Korea, South

3,004

3,335

3,189

3,451

3,197

9

Brazil

2,974

3,219

3,005

3,035

3,212

10

Taiwan

2,358

2,218

2,532

2,606

2,283

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

United States: Imports from Top Source Countries

Rank

Country

Sep-10

Oct-10

Nov-10

Dec-10

Jan-11

0

—World—

166,372

170,119

168,850

166,398

166,274

1

China

34,999

34,820

35,116

30,802

31,350

2

Canada

22,980

23,285

22,741

24,313

24,359

3

Mexico

19,780

21,106

20,456

19,211

19,735

4

Japan

10,017

11,217

11,015

11,360

9,974

5

Germany

6,768

7,669

7,662

7,362

6,768

6

Korea, South

4,269

4,427

4,769

4,151

4,200

7

Venezuela

2,843

2,432

2,691

2,743

3,648

8

United Kingdom

3,972

4,382

4,151

4,472

3,598

9

Taiwan

3,303

3,246

3,311

3,228

3,225

10

Nigeria

2,817

2,209

2,114

2,905

3,145

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

United States: Top Deficit Balance Partners

Rank

Country

Sep-10

Oct-10

Nov-10

Dec-10

Jan-11

0

—World—

-58,584

-52,523

-55,901

-49,408

-56,031

1

China

-27,831

-25,517

-25,634

-20,682

-23,271

2

Japan

-5,037

-5,666

-5,794

-5,900

-4,981

3

Mexico

-5,772

-5,753

-5,617

-4,691

-4,895

4

Germany

-2,658

-3,296

-3,096

-3,264

-3,120

5

Ireland

-2,247

-2,711

-2,312

-2,613

-1,917

6

Saudi Arabia

-1,790

-1,398

-2,106

-1,761

-1,594

7

Canada

-1,097

-1,093

-1,752

-3,872

-3,684

8

Nigeria

-2,465

-1,844

-1,749

-2,524

-2,876

9

Russia

-1,796

-1,547

-1,667

-1,403

-2,126

10

Venezuela

-1,899

-1,231

-1,580

-1,995

-2,817

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, U.S. Census Bureau, via Global Trade Atlas.

Author Contact Information

[author name scrubbed], Coordinator, Specialist in Industry and Trade ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])
[author name scrubbed], Specialist in International Trade and Finance ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])
[author name scrubbed], Information Research Specialist ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])
[author name scrubbed], Specialist in Agricultural Policy ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])

Footnotes

1.

Japan, Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, Japan's Nuclear Emergency—Update, April 6, 2011.

2.

Data are updated daily. See Japan National Police Agency, Damage Situation and Police Countermeasures associated with 2011Tohoku district - off the Pacific Ocean Earthquake. http://www.npa.go.jp/archive/keibi/biki/higaijokyo_e.pdf

3.

For further information, see CRS Report R41694, Fukushima Nuclear Crisis, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed].

4.

"Many Tohoku Schools Still Shut By Quake," NIKKEI.com, April 1, 2011.

5.

"TEPCO announced schedule for ending nuclear troubles," The Denki Shimbun, The Electric Daily News, April 19, 2011, http://www.shimbun.denki.or.jp/en/news/20110419_01.html.

6.

CRS Report R41751, Effects of Radiation from Fukushima Daiichi on the U.S. Marine Environment, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed].

7.

U.S. Food and Drug Administration, What Is FDA Doing to Ensure the Safety of Products Imported from Japan?, Radiation Safety/Questions About Food Safety, Washington, DC, updated March 23, 2011, http://www.fda.gov/NewsEvents/PublicHealthFocus/ucm247403.htm. For analysis, see CRS Report R41766, Japan's 2011 Earthquake and Tsunami: Food and Agriculture Implications, by [author name scrubbed].

8.

"China, U.S., Other Countries Suspend, Restrict Japanese Imports Due to Radiation," International Trade Daily: News/Import Policy, April 19, 2011.

9.

"Shippers Seek Japan Premiums," The Wall Street Journal Asia, April 1, 2011, Internet edition.

10.

CRS Report R41751, Effects of Radiation from Fukushima Daiichi on the U.S. Marine Environment, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed].

11.

Kyohei Morita and Yuichiro Nagai, Japan Economic Focus, Economic implications of earthquake, Barclays Capital, Japan Economic Research, March 15, 2011.

12.

IHS Global Insight, Japan: Japan—Interim Annual Forecast, May 9, 2011.

13.

Morgan Stanley MUFG, Tohoku Earthquake: First Assessment, Japan Research, New York, NY, March 22, 2011, p. 6.

14.

Economist Intelligence Unit, Japan Economy: EIU's Latest Assumptions, May 19, 2011.

15.

World Bank, East Asia and Pacific Economic Update 2011, The Recent Earthquake and Tsunami in Japan: Implications for East Asia, Washington, DC, March 21, 2011, http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTEAPHALFYEARLYUPDATE/Resources/550192-1300567391916/EAP_Update_March2011_japan.pdf.

16.

Paul J. Scalise, "Looming Electricity Crisis," The Oriental Economist Report, vol. 79, no. 4 (April 2011), p. 8.

17.

Kesennuma and Ishonomaki ports are not operating.

18.

Roads in Tokyo (16 roads) and in neighboring prefectures of Saitama (155) and Chiba (278) also were damaged.

19.

"Supply-Chain Woes Persist 2 Months After Quake," Nikkei.com, May 11, 2011.

20.

Kyohei Morita and Yuichiro Nagai, Economic Implications of Earthquake, op. cit.

21.

"Production Bases Destroyed by Quake. Manufacturers' Plants, Distribution Facilities in Tohoku, Northern Kanto Hit Hard," Yomiuri Shimbun, March 16, 2011.

22.

"Quake-Hit Refiners Restoring Fuel Supply," Nikkei.com, March 25, 2011.

23.

Dan Milmo, "G7 rallies behind Japan in bid to curb soaring yen," The Guardian, March 18, 2011, http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2011/mar/18/g7-japan-curb-soaring-yen-intervention.

24.

From an internal report by Medley Global Advisors, March 16, 2011.

25.

World Bank, The Recent Earthquake and Tsunami in Japan: Implications for East Asia, March 21, 2011, op. cit.

26.

U.S. Department of the Treasury, http://www.ustreas.gov/tic/.

27.

Ibid.

28.

Hiroko Tabuchi and Bettina Wassener, "S.&P. Downgrades Japan as Debt Concerns Spread," The New York Times, January 27, 2011, Internet edition. Moody's gives Japanese government debt a similar rating.

29.

Marcus Noland, Will the Crisis Create a New Japan?, Peterson Institute for International Economics, op-ed, Washington Post, March 16, 2011.

30.

"5-10% Salary Cuts Agreed For Central Government Employees," Nikkei.com, May 23, 2011.

31.

Tokyo Foreign Press Center Japan Online, "Overview of and Recovery from the Great East Japan Earthquake (Part 8)," May 13, 2011.

32.

"Key Highway Set to Reopen in Sept; Shelters to Close by Aug," Nikkei.com, May 20, 2011.

33.

AIR Worldwide, AIR Worldwide Updates Estimate of Insured Losses from the Mw 9.0 Tohoku Earthquake Based on Detailed Analysis of Ground Motion and Tsunami Footprint, Press Release, Boston, MA, March 25, 2011, http://www.air-worldwide.com/NewsAndEventsItem.aspx?id=20437.

34.

International Monetary Fund, Global Markets Analysis Division, Monetary and Capital Markets Division, Global Markets Monitor, Washington, DC, March 17, 2011.

35.

"Quake Insurance Payments Hit Y33.4 bn," NIKKEI.com, April 6, 2011.

36.

Economist Intelligence Unit.

37.

According to one estimate, Japan's GDP growth could be reduced by 0.3% resulting in no growth for the current quarter. Global Insight. Japan's March 2011 Earthquake: Disruption, Risks and Outlook, March 16, 2011. Another estimate puts the loss at 0.5% GDP. Standard Charted Research, Japan—Assessing the Impact ,March 15, 2011.

38.

Automotive News, March 14, 2011.

39.

National Highway Administration, http://www.nhtsa.gov.

40.

Automotive News, March 15, 2011.

41.

E-mail communication from Dale Ford, Senior Vice President, Market Intelligence, IHS iSuppli company. March 17, 2011.

42.

"Japan crisis 'terrible' for Hawaii tourism," UPI.com, March 17, 2011.

43.

U.S. Department of Commerce, International Trade Administration, Table C - Section 5: United Kingdom, Japan, S. Korea, PRC (EXCL Hong Kong), ROC(Taiwan) Non-Resident Visitation to the U.S. By world region/country of residence 2010, 2010 Monthly Tourism Statistics, Washington, DC, Data through November 2010, http://tinet.ita.doc.gov/view/m-2010-I-001/table5.html.

44.

Washington Trade Daily, March 25, 2011.

45.

Prepared by [author name scrubbed], Specialist in Agricultural Policy. Contact her for more background information and for full references on all cited data and official statements. For further analysis, see CRS Report R41766, Japan's 2011 Earthquake and Tsunami: Food and Agriculture Implications, by [author name scrubbed].

46.

MAFF, "The Damages caused by the Great East Japan Earthquake and Actions taken by Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries," May 16, 2011, http://www.maff.go.jp/e/quake/press_110511-1.html. Reported at 1,752.2 billion yen.

47.

MAFF, "The Damages caused by the Great East Japan Earthquake and Actions taken by Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries," May 16, 2011, http://www.maff.go.jp/e/quake/press_110511-1.html.

48.

Ibid.

49.

USDA, Economic Research Service (ERS), "Japan: Current Issues in Japanese Agriculture," Table 1. http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/Japan/currentissues.htm.

50.

Japan's Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (MAFF), 84th Statistical Yearbook (2008-2009), http://www.maff.go.jp/%20e/tokei/kikaku/nenji_e/index.html; MAFF, "Summary of Agricultural Production," http://www.maff.go.jp/e/tokei/kikaku/nenji_e/pdf/n0030e.pdf. Converted from yen to dollars (2007). By comparison, the farm value of U.S. agricultural products sold is about $300 billion (Source: USDA, Census of Agriculture, 2007).

51.

Ibid. MAFF, "Summary of Fishery Production," http://www.maff.go.jp/e/tokei/kikaku/nenji_e/pdf/n0031e.pdf.

52.

FAOSTAT Production, http://faostat.fao.org/site/339/default.aspx.

53.

Global Trade Atlas, http://www.gtis.com/gta/. Harmonized System (HS) codes in chapters 01-22. Excludes food waste (HS 23) and tobacco products (HS 24).

54.

Reports are posted by Japan's Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare (MHLW), "Information about 2011 Tohoku-Pacific Ocean Earthquake," http://www.mhlw.go.jp/english/topics/2011eq/index.html.

55.

MLHW, "Restriction of distribution and/or consumption of foods concerned in Fukushima and Ibaraki Prefectures," March 23, 2011, http://www.mhlw.go.jp/stf/houdou/2r98520000015wun-att/2r98520000015xym.pdf.

56.

MLHW, "Handling Monitoring of Radioactive Contaminants for Agricultural and Livestock Products," March 23, 2011, http://www.mhlw.go.jp/english/topics/2011eq/dl/food-110323.pdf.

57.

MLHW, "Restriction of distribution and/or consumption of log-grown Shiitake (outdoor cultivation) produced in parts of Fukushima Prefecture," April 13, 2011, http://www.mhlw.go.jp/english/topics/2011eq/dl/food-110413.pdf.

58.

MLHW, "Restriction of distribution of Bamboo shoot and Ostrich fern produced in parts of Fukushima Prefecture," May 9, 2011, http://www.mhlw.go.jp/english/topics/2011eq/dl/food-110509.pdf.

59.

MLHW, "Update of 'Request for shipment restraint and other measures' (lifting restrictions on some products)," May 16, 2011, http://www.mhlw.go.jp/english/topics/2011eq/dl/food-110420.pdf.

60.

MLHW, "Restriction of distribution and consumption of Juvenile sand lance landed at Fukushima Prefecture," April 20, 2011, http://www.mhlw.go.jp/english/topics/2011eq/dl/food-110420.pdf.

61.

FDA, "Detention Without Physical Examination of Products from Japan Due to Radionuclide Contamination," Import Alert 99-33, http://www.accessdata.fda.gov/cms_ia/importalert_621.html. All U.S. alerts for Japan are at http://www.accessdata.fda.gov/cms_ia/country_JP.html.

62.

For the most recent version see FDA's website, http://www.accessdata.fda.gov/cms_ia/importalert_621.html. This import alert was first issued on March 22, and was subsequently revised on March 25, April 12, April 15, and April 20, April 21, and May 17, 2011.

63.

FDA, "Radiation Safety," http://www.fda.gov/newsevents/publichealthfocus/ucm247403.htm#importjapan.

64.

For additional information about DWPE and FDA's authority, see CRS Report R41766, Japan's 2011 Earthquake and Tsunami: Food and Agriculture Implications, by [author name scrubbed].

65.

CRS Report RL34198, U.S. Food and Agricultural Imports: Safeguards and Selected Issues; and CRS Report RS22600, The Federal Food Safety System: A Primer. In addition, USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) is responsible for protecting plant and animal resources from domestic and foreign pests and diseases, and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is responsible for coordinating agencies' food security activities, including border inspections by DHS's U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP).

66.

See, for example, "DeLauro Wants All Japanese Food Bound for the U.S. Tested," CQ Health Beat, March 23, 2001.

67.

FDA, "Radiation," http://www.fda.gov/NewsEvents/PublicHealthFocus/ucm247403.htm; and USDA, "USDA's Radiation Safety Questions and Answers," http://www.usda.gov/wps/portal/usda/usdahome?contentidonly=true&contented=radiation_safety_qa.html.

68.

For example, FDA requirements under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 301 et seq.); FSIS requirements under the Federal Meat Inspection Act (21 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) and the Poultry Products Inspection Act (21 U.S.C. 451 et seq.).

69.

For example, requirements under Country of Origin Labeling program and the Perishable Agricultural Commodities Act.

70.

See, for example, U.N. World Health Organization (WHO), "FAQs: Japan Nuclear Concerns"; U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), "United Nations System Response"; U.N., "Nuclear Emergency in Japan and Food Safety Concerns"; International Food Safety Authorities Network (INFOSAN), "Information on Nuclear Accidents and Radioactive Contamination of Foods"; and Codex Alimentarius, "Codex General Standard for Contaminants and Toxins in Food and Feed," Stand. 193-1995.