Japan’s Possible Entry Into the Trans-Pacific
Partnership and Its Implications

William H. Cooper
Specialist in International Trade and Finance
Mark E. Manyin
Specialist in Asian Affairs
April 8, 2013
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
R42676
CRS Report for Congress
Pr
epared for Members and Committees of Congress

Japan’s Possible Entry Into the Trans-Pacific Partnership and Its Implications

Summary
On March 15, 2013, Prime Minister Abe announced that Japan would formally seek to participate
in the negotiations to establish the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP). In taking this step, Prime
Minister Abe has had to confront influential domestic interests that argued against the move.
Among the most vocal have been Japanese farmers, especially rice farmers, and their
representatives. In his March 15 statement, Prime Minister Abe acknowledged these domestic
sensitivities, but also insisted that Japan needed to take advantage of “this last window of
opportunity” to enter the negotiations, if it is to grow economically. Other Japanese business
interests, including manufacturers, strongly support the TPP.
The TPP would be a free trade agreement (FTA) among at least the current 11 participants—
Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, the United
States, and Vietnam. The United States and its TPP partners envision the agreement as “a
comprehensive, next-generation regional agreement that liberalizes trade and investment and
addresses new and traditional trade issues and 21st century challenges.”
The 11 countries must still reach a consensus, if Japan is allowed to join the negotiations. As part
of the process, Japan has been discussing conditions for its entry into the negotiations with each
of the 11 countries. It has completed discussions with six countries, while continuing discussions
with the United States, Australia, Canada Mexico, and New Zealand. The United States has
identified issues regarding autos, insurance, and beef that need to be addressed.
Congress has a direct and oversight role in the issue of U.S. participation in the TPP. It must
approve implementing legislation, if the TPP is to apply to the United States. Some Members of
Congress have already weighed in on whether Japan should be allowed to participate in the TPP
and under what conditions. More may do so as the process proceeds.
The TPP is the leading U.S. trade policy initiative of the Obama Administration and a core
component of Administration efforts to “rebalance” U.S. foreign policy priorities toward the Asia-
Pacific region by playing a more active role in shaping the region’s rules and norms. As the
second-largest economy in Asia, the third-largest economy in the world, and a key link in global
supply/production chains, Japan’s participation would be pivotal to enhancing the credibility and
viability of the TPP as a regional free trade arrangement.
Japan’s membership in the TPP with the United States would constitute a de facto U.S.-Japan
FTA. A large segment of the U.S. business community has expressed support for Japanese
participation in the TPP, if Japan can resolve long-standing issues on access to its markets for
U.S. goods and services. However, the Detroit-based U.S. auto industry and the UAW union have
expressed strong opposition to Japan participating in the TPP negotiations.
The TPP issue presents both risks and opportunities for the United States and Japan. On the one
hand, if successful, it could reinvigorate an economic relationship that has remained steady but
stagnant, by forcing the two countries to address long-standing, difficult issues, and allowing
them to raise their relationship to a higher level. On the other hand, failure to do so could indicate
that the underlying problems are too fundamental to overcome and could set back the
relationship. It could signify the failure of the United States and/or Japan to deal with domestic
opposition to a more open trade relationship.

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Japan’s Possible Entry Into the Trans-Pacific Partnership and Its Implications

Contents
Introduction ...................................................................................................................................... 1
An Overview of the TPP .................................................................................................................. 2
U.S.-Japan Economic Ties ............................................................................................................... 3
U.S.-Japan Trade Trends ............................................................................................................ 3
Managing the Trade Relationship .............................................................................................. 5
Pending Challenges and the TPP ..................................................................................................... 6
Market Access for U.S. Beef ..................................................................................................... 7
Market Access for U.S.-Made Autos ......................................................................................... 7
Insurance, Express Delivery, and Japan Post............................................................................. 8
Overall U.S. Objectives ................................................................................................................... 9
Market Access ........................................................................................................................... 9
Rules-based Trade Framework and Impartial Dispute Settlement ............................................ 9
Enhanced TPP ......................................................................................................................... 10
Foreign Policy Interests ........................................................................................................... 11
Japan’s Objectives ......................................................................................................................... 12
Japanese Politics and the TPP ........................................................................................................ 14
The Views of U.S. Stakeholders .................................................................................................... 16
Outlook, Possible Outcomes, and Consequences .......................................................................... 17

Figures
Figure 1. U.S. Merchandise Trade with Various Countries and Trading Blocs ............................. 11

Tables
Table 1. U.S.-Japan Merchandise Trade, 2004-2012 ....................................................................... 4
Table 2. U.S.-Japan Trade in Services, 2004-2012 .......................................................................... 4
Table 3. Japan’s Free Trade Agreements ........................................................................................ 13
Table 4. Comparative Japanese and U.S. Tariff Rates on Select Agricultural Products ................ 15

Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 18

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Japan’s Possible Entry Into the Trans-Pacific Partnership and Its Implications

Introduction
The United States is engaged in negotiations with 10 other countries to form a regional free trade
agreement (FTA)—the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP).1 In the negotiations, the
United States and the other TPP partner-countries seek to build “a comprehensive, next-
generation regional agreement that liberalizes trade and investment and addresses new and
traditional trade issues and 21st century challenges.”2 The TPP partners also envision the
agreement to be a building block towards the establishment of a broader, Asian-Pacific regional
FTA, sometimes referred to as the Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific (FTAAP).
On March 15, 2013, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe announced on March 15, 2013, that
Japan would formally seek to participate in the negotiations to establish the TPP. The
announcement followed an initial expression of interest in November 2011 by then-Prime
Minister Noda. In the intervening months, Japanese supporters of the TPP, including
representatives of major companies, and TPP opponents, including representatives of the very
vocal and politically influential agricultural sector, engaged in debate. In addition, lower house
parliamentary elections led to the formation of a new government under the Liberal Democratic
Party (LDP) and Abe as prime minister. In his March 15 statement, Prime Minister Abe
acknowledged the interests and sensitivities of the agricultural groups, but he also insisted that
Japan needed to take advantage of “this last window of opportunity” to enter the negotiations, if it
is to grow economically.
U.S. and Japanese trade officials are engaged in preliminary discussions on conditions for
Japanese entry into the discussions. The Obama Administration has identified issues regarding
autos, insurance, and beef, which need to be addressed.
Congress has a direct and oversight role in U.S. participation in the TPP. It must approve
implementing legislation, if a final TPP agreement is to apply to the United States. Some
Members of Congress have already weighed in on whether Japan should be allowed to participate
in the TPP and under what conditions. More may do so as the process proceeds.
The Obama Administration has been proceeding in negotiating the TPP as if trade promotion
authority (TPA), which expired on June 30, 2007, were in force. TPA is the authority that
Congress gives to the President to enter into trade agreements that can receive expedited
legislative consideration. The Administration has been adhering to consultation requirements and
notification deadlines that have been an integral part of previous TPA or fast-track statutes. To
maintain this practice, the Obama Administration would have to notify both houses of Congress
90 calendar days before it begins official negotiations (as opposed to preliminary discussions)
with Japan on the TPP.
The TPP is the leading U.S. trade policy initiative of the Obama Administration and a pillar of its
efforts to “rebalance” U.S. foreign policy priorities toward the Asia-Pacific region by playing a
more active role in shaping the region’s rules and norms. As the second-largest economy in Asia,

1 The eight countries are Australia, Brunei, Chile, Malaysia, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, the United States, and
Vietnam. The governments of Mexico and Canada also expressed interest and, after a series of consultations, were
formally invited to join by the nine TPP partners on June 18 and June 19, 2012, respectively. They will join the
negotiations officially in the fall of 2012.
2 Trans-Pacific Partnership Leaders Statement, November 11, 2011.
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the third-largest economy in the world, and a key link in the global supply chain, Japan’s
participation would be pivotal to the credibility and viability of the TPP as a regional trade
arrangement. The inclusion of Japan would expand the amount of U.S. trade and foreign
investment that the TPP would cover if implemented.
For Japan, participation in the TPP could potentially transform its economy by providing
unprecedented access to the Japanese market for foreign exporters and investors. It could also
force Tokyo to confront structural economic problems that have long impeded economic growth.
It would also symbolize Japan’s continued position as an economic power in East Asia, an image
that has been tarnished by decades of economic stagnation and the growth of China.
Japan’s participation in the TPP would have important implications for the U.S.-Japan
relationship. For example, it already has renewed a focus on long-standing issues, such as access
to Japan’s markets for autos, agricultural products, and insurance, which have remained irritants
in the relationship. These issues will likely have to be addressed in one form or another, perhaps
even before Japan is approved as a full-fledged TPP participant. New issues will undoubtedly also
be raised in the process.
An Overview of the TPP
The TPP is an evolving regional free trade agreement (FTA). It was originally formed as the
Trans-Pacific Strategic Economic Partnership—an FTA now in effect among Singapore, New
Zealand, Chile, and Brunei (the so-called “P-4”). In the fall of 2008, the United States, along with
Australia, Peru, and Vietnam, joined the negotiations to accede to the arrangement. Malaysia
joined as the ninth negotiating partner in October 2010.
On November 14, 2009, President Obama committed the United States to engage with the TPP
countries to transform the original P-4 pact into a regional arrangement with broad-based
membership and “the high standards worthy of a 21st century trade agreement.”3 After several
months of discussions, the nine partners announced a framework for the agreement in time for the
ministerial meeting of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum in Honolulu,
Hawaii, which was held November 8-13, 2011. The TPP partners conducted a series of rounds
since that time and are aiming to complete the agreement by the end of 2013.
As reflected in the framework, the TPP partners envision a comprehensive arrangement covering
a broad range of trade and trade-related activities, similar in structure to a number of recently
concluded U.S. FTAs. These activities include market access for goods and services; government
procurement; foreign investment; technical barriers to trade; trade remedies; sanitary and
phytosanitary measures;4 intellectual property rights; worker rights; and environmental
protection. The TPP countries also agreed to pursue cross-cutting issues such as regulatory
coherence, competitiveness, and business facilitation, also known as transnational supply and
production chains; the participation of small and medium-sized companies; economic
development; and potential disciplines on the state-owned enterprises (SOEs).

3 Remarks of President Obama at Suntory Hall, Tokyo, Japan, November 14, 2009.
4 Sanitary and Phytosanitary measures are procedures used by government agencies to ensure the animal and plant
products are safe for consumption.
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The TPP participants also envision the TPP to go beyond typical FTAs by being:
• a regional agreement that facilitates trade by minimizing the “noodle bowl” effect
that has been created by different sets of rules under the more than 100 bilateral and
regional FTAs that exist in the Asia Pacific-region;
• an agreement that addresses trade challenges that are emerging in the 21st century,
for example, cloud computing and SOEs, that have not been addressed in previous
FTAs nor fully in the World Trade Organization (WTO) because they did not exist
or were considered not as important; and
• a “living agreement” that will not restrict its membership to the 11 countries but will
be open to other countries acceding to it as long as they are willing to commit to its
provisions and will take on new issues as they arise.
The leaders of the nine TPP countries instructed their negotiators to develop a completed legal
text as soon as possible. The complexity of the issues at hand, the diversity of the membership,
and the possibility of new members, such as, Japan, and newly invited Canada and Mexico,
suggest challenges ahead for the negotiators.
U.S.-Japan Economic Ties
A brief overview of U.S.-Japan economic ties can provide context for understanding U.S. and
Japanese interests in the TPP and the potential implications from various perspectives. It could
also shed light on opportunities and challenges presented by an FTA that includes the United
States and Japan. A U.S.-Japan FTA is not a new idea, but it is a policy option that has failed to
take hold in the past because of some fundamental issues which have been seemingly intractable.
U.S.-Japan Trade Trends
The United States and Japan are the world’s first and third-largest economic powers. Together
they account for over 30% of gross world product.5 The two countries remain very important
economic partners, accounting for large shares of each other’s foreign trade and investment, even
though their relative economic significance to one another has declined over the last few years. In
1999, Japan slipped from being the second-largest U.S. trading partner to the third largest. In
2004, it slipped to number four, where it has remained. Until 2007, the United States was Japan’s
largest trading partner, but it slipped to number two since 2007.6
The global financial crisis and economic downturn added another dimension to the relationship as
the two countries have grappled with the severe impact of the crisis on their respective
economies, while working with their partners in the G-20 to coordinate a multilateral response.7
The impact of the March 11, 2011, earthquake and subsequent tsunami and nuclear accidents in
northeast Japan also affected trade, although not as much as originally anticipated.

5 CRS calculation based on data in CIA, World Factbook, http://www.CIA.gov.
6 Global Trade Atlas.
7 The G-20 countries are Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan,
Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Turkey, the United Kingdom, the United States, and the
European Union.
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U.S.-Japanese bilateral trade in goods and services declined significantly in 2009 over 2008
levels because of the global economic downturn but has picked up since. (See Table 1 and Table
2
.)
Table 1. U.S.-Japan Merchandise Trade, 2004-2012
($ billions)
U.S. Trade
Year
U.S. Exports
U.S. Imports
Total Trade
Balances
2004 54.4
129.6
184.0
-75.2
2005 55.4
138.1
193.5
-82.7
2006 59.6
148.2
207.8
-88.6
2007 62.7
145.5
208.2
-82.8
2008 66.6
139.2
205.8
-72.3
2009
51.2 95.9 147.1 -44.8
2010 60.5
120.3
180.8
-59.8
2011 66.2
128.8
195.0
-62.2
2012 70.0
146.4
216.4
-76.3
Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, U.S. Census Bureau.
Table 2. U.S.-Japan Trade in Services, 2004-2012
($ billions)
U.S. Trade
Year
U.S. Exports
U.S. Imports
Total Trade
Balances
2004 36.0 21.3 57.3 14.8
2005 42.5 23.8 66.3 18.7
2006 42.0 25.5 67.5 16.5
2007 41.2 26.2 67.4 15.0
2008 42.3 25.7 68.0 16.6
2009 41.4 22.9 64.3 18.5
2010 45.1 25.9 71.0 19.2
2011 44.9 27.5 72.4 17.4
2012* 47.1
29.4
76.5
17.7
Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis.
Note: * Preliminary.
Raw trade data likely underestimate Japan’s importance because they do not readily measure
Japan’s role in the East Asian supply and production networks that produce goods exported to the
United States. The two countries are also economically tied through investment flows. For
example, Japanese investors are the second-largest group (next to China) of foreign holders of
U.S. treasury securities and, therefore, U.S. government debt and of direct investments in the U.S.
economy.
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In the 1980s and 1990s, the bilateral economic relationship was the centerpiece of U.S. and
Japanese foreign economic agendas. Persistent and increasing U.S. merchandise trade deficits
with Japan, sharp increases in Japanese exports to the United States of high-value manufactured
products, such as cars, and large volumes of Japanese investments in the United States (including
purchases of high-profile properties, such as the Empire State Building) stoked fears in the United
States of Japan as an economic threat to the United States. Many scholarly and popular books and
journal articles were written on the subject.8
However, since the mid-1990s, the trade relationship with Japan has been a lower priority for
U.S. officials. One reason for the shift may be the rise of China as a global trade and economic
power, and source of challenges and opportunities to U.S. trade policymakers. Symbolic of this
rise are the relative merchandise trade balances with Japan and China. While U.S. merchandise
trade deficits with Japan have remained relatively constant in recent years, the U.S. deficits with
China have risen significantly. In 2012, the U.S. trade deficit with Japan was $76.3 billion, while
the trade deficit with China was $315.1 billion.9
Another reason may have been that Japan’s economic problems over the last two decades have
made it seem less of a competitive “threat.”10 In addition, the level of Japanese foreign direct
investments in the United States has declined. Furthermore, security issues, such as North Korea’s
nuclear program (the United States and Japan are parties to talks on North Korea’s fledgling
nuclear program) and the relocation of U.S. troops in Japan, have overshadowed bilateral trade
relations as a priority.11 Nevertheless, trade-related tensions remained, albeit below the surface.
Managing the Trade Relationship
Over the years, U.S.-Japan economic relations have experienced degrees of friction, sometimes to
the point of threatening the stability of the alliance. The United States dominated the economic
relationship with Japan for many years after World War II. The United States was by far the
largest economy in the world, and Japan was dependent on the United States for national security.
The United States set the agenda, and the issues on the agenda were driven by the U.S. demands
for Japan to curb exports to the United States and/or to remove barriers to U.S. exports and
investments.
In the 1960s and 1970s, the primary issues were Japan’s perceived protectionist economic
policies that it implemented through high tariffs and other border restrictions. As Japan’s
economy became more developed and competitive and as it negotiated reductions in its tariffs
with other members of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)—now the World
Trade Organization (WTO)—the United States focused on non-tariff barriers, including “behind
the border” measures, such as government regulations that, while not ostensibly protectionist,
may be applied in a way that restricts trade. Certain measures are not covered by WTO

8 For example, Clyde V. Prestowitz, Trading Places: How We Allowed Japan to Take the Lead, New York: Basic
Books, 1988.
9 For more information on the rise of China in U.S. economic relations, see CRS Report RL33536, China-U.S. Trade
Issues
, by Wayne M. Morrison.
10 For more information on Japan’s economic problems, see archived CRS Report RL30176, Japan's "Economic
Miracle": What Happened?
, by William H. Cooper.
11 For more information on the overall U.S.-Japan relationship, see CRS Report RL33436, Japan-U.S. Relations: Issues
for Congress
, coordinated by Emma Chanlett-Avery.
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agreements and are currently not readily addressed in trade negotiations since they serve non-
trade functions. Examples of such measures include
• domestic taxes on car purchases and other regulations said to discriminate against
sales of imported vehicles;
• a government contract bidding system that favors certain domestic providers of
construction services;
• zoning regulations that discourage the establishment of large retail stores that are
more likely to sell imported products than the smaller stores the regulations are
designed to protect;
• government health insurance reimbursement regulations that discourage the
purchase of newer, leading-edge pharmaceuticals and medical devices, many of
which are imported; and
• government subsidies for the production of semiconductors.
To address these non-tariff barriers Japan and the United States employed, largely at the latter’s
instigation, special bilateral frameworks and agreements to conduct their government-to-
government economic relations. These arrangements included
• the Market-Oriented Sector-Specific (MOSS) talks started in 1985;
• the Structural Impediments Initiative (SII), begun in March 1989;
• the United States-Japan Framework for a New Economic Partnership, begun in
1993;
• the Enhanced Initiative on Deregulation and Competition Policy (the Enhanced
Initiative), begun in 1997;
• the U.S.-Japan Economic Partnership for Growth (The Economic Partnership)
begun in 2001; and
• the United States-Japan Economic Harmonization Initiative, launched in 2010,
which now operates as the primary bilateral forum for bilateral discussions.
The two countries also concluded bilateral agreements or memoranda of understanding (MOUs),
whereby Japan agreed to address U.S. concerns about its trading practices for specific products,
including autos and semiconductors.
These arrangements varied in their approaches. However, they shared some basic characteristics:
they were bilateral; were designed to remedy U.S.-Japan trade problems by focusing on
regulations and other fundamental barriers; and were typically initiated by the United States.
However, these arrangements were only of limited success, judging by the fact that many of the
issues they were supposed to address remain.
Pending Challenges and the TPP
Many of the issues that have continually irritated the U.S.-Japan economic relationship could be
addressed within the TPP. U.S. policymakers and other stakeholders have identified three issues
that, if resolved, would be considered “confidence-building measures” that could boost U.S.
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support of Japan’s inclusion in the TPP. The issues relate to Japanese restrictions on imports of
U.S. beef; market access in Japan for cars made by Detroit-based U.S. manufacturers; and
preferential treatment for insurance and express delivery subsidiaries of state-owned Japan Post.12
Market Access for U.S. Beef
In December 2003 Japan imposed a ban on imported U.S. beef (as did some other countries) in
response to the discovery of the first U.S. case of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE or
“mad cow disease”) in Washington State. In the months before the diagnosis in the United States,
nearly a dozen Japanese cows infected with BSE had been discovered, creating a scandal over the
Agricultural Ministry’s handling of the issue (several more Japanese BSE cases have since
emerged). Japan had retained the ban despite ongoing negotiations and public pressure from Bush
Administration officials, a reported framework agreement (issued jointly by both governments) in
October 2004 to end it, and periodic assurances afterward by Japanese officials to their U.S.
counterparts that it would be lifted soon.
In December 2005, Japan lifted the ban after many months of bilateral negotiations, but
reimposed it in January 2006 after Japanese government inspectors found bone material among
the initial beef shipments. The presence of the bone material violated the procedures U.S. and
Japanese officials had agreed upon. The then-U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Johanns expressed
regret that the prohibited material had entered the shipments.
In July 2006, Japan announced it would resume imports of U.S. beef from cattle 20 months old or
younger. The first shipments arrived in August 2006. Members of Congress had pressed Japan to
lift restrictions on imports of U.S. beef from even older cattle. U.S. officials met with Japanese
agricultural officials September 14-15, 2010, for technical discussions but produced no clear
indication of resolution of the issue. On August 4, 2011, a bipartisan group of Senators sent a
letter to Secretary of Agriculture Vilsack and to USTR Ron Kirk, urging them to press Japan (and
China) to end restrictions on imports of U.S. beef. In December 2011 Japan announced that it was
reassessing its BSE-related restrictions with the objective to raise the maximum age of cattle from
which U.S. beef can be exported to Japan.
On February 1, 2013, the Japanese government loosened its restrictions on beef imports from the
United States to allow beef from cattle 30 months or younger for the first time since December
2003. According to a joint press release from the Office of the United States Trade Representative
and the Department of Agriculture, the Japanese government’s Food Safety Commission would
continue to monitor shipments of U.S. beef and would consider the possibility of allowing U.S.
beef from cattle of any age to be imported into Japan.
Market Access for U.S.-Made Autos
Auto and auto-parts-related trade and investment have been a very sensitive set of issues in the
U.S.-Japan economic relationship. The issue has its roots in the late 1970s and early 1980s, when
U.S. imports of Japanese-made vehicles surged as a result of the increase in U.S. consumer

12 Office of the USTR, U.S., Japan Hold High-Level Discussions on the Trans-Pacific Partnership,
http://www.ustr.gov/about-us/press-office/press-releases/2012/february/us-japan-hold-high-level-consultation-trans-
pacif.
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demand for smaller vehicles, largely in response to the rapid increase in gasoline prices, while
demand for U.S.–manufactured cars plummeted. Facing pressure from the U.S. auto industry and
pressure from Congress in the form of limits on imports of Japanese made cars, the Reagan
Administration persuaded Japan to agree in 1981 to voluntary export restraints. Japanese
manufacturers responded to the restraints by establishing manufacturing facilities in the United
States and exporting high-valued, passenger cars. U.S. manufacturers asserted that Japan
employed various measures to restrict sales of foreign-made cars in Japan and the use of U.S.-
made parts in Japanese cars manufactured in the United States. These issues were the subject of
bilateral negotiations and agreements through the 1990s. The agreements were mostly in the form
of Japanese government pledges to ensure that government regulations did not impede the sale of
U.S.-made cars in Japan and voluntary efforts on the part of Japanese manufacturers to increase
the use of U.S.-made auto parts in cars made in the United States. The U.S. government pledged
to implement programs to promote the export of U.S.-made cars in Japan.
The intensity of the issue had subsided somewhat but has regained attention in the context of
Japan’s possible participation in the TPP negotiations. (See TPP discussion below.) The three
Detroit-based car manufacturers—Chrysler, Ford, and General Motors—charge that Japanese
government regulations continue to prevent them from obtaining their fair share of Japanese
domestic vehicle sales. They cite the traditionally small share of total cars sales in Japan that
consist of imported cars—around 7.4%. U.S. manufacturers account for a small share of sales of
imported cars in in Japan—2.1% in 2011. 13
Insurance, Express Delivery, and Japan Post
Japan is the world’s second-largest insurance market, next to the United States. U.S.-based
insurance providers have found it difficult to enter the market, especially in life and annuity
insurance. They have been concerned about favorable regulatory treatment that the government
gives to the insurance subsidiary Japan Post Insurance of Japan Post, the national postal system,
which holds a large share of the Japanese domestic insurance market. Japan Post subsidizes the
insurance operations from revenues from its other operations. Also, Japan Post Insurance is not
subject to the same regulations as other, privately owned insurance providers, both domestic and
foreign-owned. Similarly, U.S. express delivery providers have charged that Japan Post’s express
delivery company obtains subsides from the government-owned parent agency that gives it an
unfair competitive advantage.
On October 1, 2007, the Japanese government of then-Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi
introduced reforms to privatize Japan Post and a major objective of his administration. The Bush
Administration and many U.S. companies, particularly insurance companies, supported these
reforms. However, successor governments led by the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) have taken
steps to roll back the reforms. On March 12, 2012, the government introduced, and on April 27,
2012, Japan’s legislature passed, a bill into law to loosen regulatory requirements. According to
industry reports and other commentaries, the bill reverses the reforms that the Koizumi
government introduced.14

13 Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association, http://www.jama.org/pdf/MVS2011.pdf.
14 Coalition of Service Industries, Proposed Japanese Legislation Complicates Entry in to the TPP, press release, April
6, 2012. Also, Parker, David A. and Matthew P. Goodman, Japan Post Reform: Return to Sender, commentary from
Center for Strategic and International Studies, May 30, 2012.
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Among other things, the United States wants the Japanese government to refrain from allowing
Japan Post to expand its coverage of services until a “level playing field” for competition between
its services and those offered by privately owned providers. In addition, the U.S. government
wants enhanced transparency in the development and implementation of regulations pertaining to
Japan Post-provided services. The U.S. government and U.S.-based providers have had similar
concerns about insurance services sold by cooperatives (kyosai) that are not subject to the same
regulatory authorities as private insurers and have argued give them an unfair advantage over
U.S. and other privately owned and operated companies.15

Overall U.S. Objectives
Japan’s possible entry into the TPP touches on a range of U.S. trade and foreign policy objectives.
Acting USTR Demetrios Marantis greeted positively Prime Minister Abe’s March 15, 2013,
statement but stipulated:
Since early last year, the United States has been engaged with Japan in bilateral TPP
consultations on issues of concern with respect to the automotive and insurance sectors and
other non-tariff measures, and also conducting work regarding meeting TPP’s high
standards. While we continue to make progress in these consultations, important work
remains to be done. We look forward to continuing these consultations with Japan as the 11
TPP countries consider Japan’s candidacy for this vital initiative in the Asia-Pacific region.16
The United States is also working with Japan on “gap issues,” to make sure that Japan would be
prepared to take steps to meet goals of the TPP in areas that Japan has not addressed in its previous
FTAs.17
Market Access
Japan’s entry into TPP negotiations could likely expand U.S. trade and investment opportunities
in Japan. The target for the United States would be to get Japan to liberalize non-tariff measures,
such as certain government regulations, which have been a more significant irritant than tariffs in
U.S.-Japan trade relations. The TPP, as envisioned and being negotiated by the current set of 11
countries, would cover at least some of these non-tariff measures that Japan maintains. If Japan
enters the TPP negotiations, the United States and Japan would have a framework within which to
address these long-standing market access issues.
Rules-based Trade Framework and Impartial Dispute Settlement
One drawback of bilateral frameworks that the United States and Japan have used in the past is
that they have had no formal dispute settlement mechanism. For example, a number of trade

15 United States Trade Representative, National Trade Estimates Report on Foreign Trade Barrier, 2013.
16 United States Trade Representative, Statement by Acting U.S. Trade Representative Demetrios Marantis on Japan’s
Announcement Regarding the Trans-Pacific Partnership,
March 15, 2013.
17 World Trade Online, March 21, 2013.
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disputes in the 1980s and 1990s—including on market access for U.S.-made autos and autoparts
in Japan, Japanese trade practices in semiconductors, and access to Japanese markets for
construction services—became highly politicized with threats of U.S. unilateral action,
potentially undermining the overall relationship. Disputes usually were resolved through
brinkmanship but often did not produce meaningful changes in Japan’s trade practices or a
significant increase of U.S. exports of the products in question. The TPP would provide a set of
mutually agreed-upon rules that go beyond the WTO but would likely use an impartial, multi-
party dispute settlement mechanism like that used in the WTO that would reduce the role of one-
on-one confrontations in resolving issues.
Enhanced TPP
Japan would increase the economic importance of the TPP from the U.S. perspective. It would
increase the amount of U.S merchandise trade that the TPP (the original nine countries plus
Canada and Mexico) would cover, from 34% to 39% based on 2011 data, and would also increase
trade in services and foreign investment activity within the TPP. (See Figure 1.) Japan would
increase the share of the world economy accounted for by TPP countries (including Canada and
Mexico), from around about 30% to about 38%.18

18 CRS calculations based on data in nominal dollars contained in the CIA World Factbook at http://www.cia.gov and
in CRS Report R42344, Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) Countries: Comparative Trade and Economic Analysis, by
Brock R. Williams.
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Figure 1. U.S. Merchandise Trade with Various Countries and Trading Blocs
(shares of total, 2011)
Wor
Wo lrd
100%
APEC
A
63%
TPP
TP -11
1 +
1 J
+ a
J pa
p n
a
39%
TPP-11
PP-1
34%
TPP-9
5%

Source: Analysis by CRS. See CRS Report R42344, Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) Countries: Comparative Trade and
Economic Analysis
, by Brock R. Williams, Data from U.S. ITC.
Japan’s participation might strengthen the U.S. position on many issues within the TPP. The
United States and Japan share some common objectives, including strong intellectual property
rights protection; protection of foreign investment; clear rules of origin to facilitate trade; and
market access for services.
Foreign Policy Interests
In addition to trade and investment interests, Japan’s participation in the TPP could affect U.S.
political and foreign policy interests. The U.S. entry into the TPP negotiations is part of the
Obama Administration’s foreign policy and military “rebalancing” to the Asia-Pacific—often
referred to as the “pivot” to the Pacific—announced in 2011.19 The pivot refers to a series of
diplomatic, military, and economic measures that the United States has taken or plans to initiate to
influence the evolving rules and norms of the Asia-Pacific region. Many policymakers and

19 For more analysis of the “pivot,” see CRS Report R42448, Pivot to the Pacific? The Obama Administration’s
“Rebalancing” Toward Asia
, coordinated by Mark E. Manyin.
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analysts believe that China’s pursuit of its own bilateral and multilateral economic arrangements
has produced a competition of sorts over the shape of Asia’s future economic architecture, in
which the United States and several other countries in the Pacific are pushing for a deeper set of
regional economic rules and expectations than Chinese leaders prefer.20 The potential inclusion of
Japan, as the second-largest economy—and richest economy on a per capita basis—in East Asia
could transform this struggle between alternative visions of regional trade rules. Additionally,
U.S. and Japanese participation in the same free trade agreement could arguably be viewed as a
means to reaffirm their alliance. The long-running bilateral relationship at times over the years
has been overshadowed by U.S. and Japanese interests and concerns elsewhere in Asia, for
example, China and the Korean Peninsula, and in other parts of the world.
Japan’s Objectives
Underlying the arguments for Japan to join the TPP talks is a growing feeling among many
Japanese that, after two decades of relatively sluggish growth, Japan’s economic and political
influence is waning in comparison with China and with middle powers such as South Korea. The
rapid aging and gradual shrinking of Japan’s population has added to a sense among many in
Japan that the country needs to develop new sources of growth to maintain, if not increase, the
country’s living standards. Japanese proponents of TPP have called for joining the talks for a
number of overlapping reasons, some defensive in nature, others more proactive:
A desire to promote Japanese growth and prevent the hollowing out of Japan—
that is, the relocation of Japanese companies to other countries—by expanding
Japanese exports, especially to the fast-growing Asia-Pacific region. The decade-
long stalemate in the WTO’s “Doha Round” of trade talks, plus the explosion in
bilateral and multilateral FTAs over the past decade, has led Japan to cautiously
pursue its own FTAs.21 As noted earlier, Japan is an important link in Asia’s global
supply chains, and the TPP could facilitate operations within the supply chain.
Conversely, greater trans-Pacific economic integration could potentially erode
Japan’s place in these manufacturing and export networks.22 In his March 15, 2013,
press conference announcing his decision to seek entry into the TPP negotiations,
Prime Minister Abe spoke of the multiple commercial benefits Japan would derive
from joining, and how doing so would help “leave to our children and our children’s
children a strong Japan....”23
A feeling that Japan is being left behind in negotiating FTAs. Although Japan
has signed 13 FTAs—what it calls Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs)—it
has none with a major economic power, with the possible exception of the 2011
Japan-India EPA, and many of them exclude agricultural trade. (See Table 3.) In
contrast, South Korea, the country many Japanese now compare themselves to, has
signed FTAs with the United States and the European Union (EU), and in 2012

20 August 2012 conversation with Takeshi Terada, Professor, Doshisha University.
21 For historical background on Japan’s FTA strategy, see archived CRS Report RL33044, Japan’s Free Trade
Agreement Program
, by Raymond J. Ahearn.
22 For more information on supply chains, CRS Report R40167, Globalized Supply Chains and U.S. Policy, by Dick K.
Nanto.
23 Japanese Prime Minister’s Office, “Press Conference by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe,” Friday, March 15, 2013
(provisional translation).
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opened negotiations with China. If Japan is left behind in the FTA race, the feeling
runs, its companies will be left at a competitive disadvantage.24 Japan has belatedly
tried to make up for the gap in 2013 by launching FTA negotiations with the EU and
with China and South Korea on a trilateral FTA.
A desire to help shape the rules of economic activity in the Asia-Pacific and
beyond. In his announcement of Japan’s bid to participate, Prime Minister Abe said
that the TPP would likely serve as “a basis for rule-making” in other multilateral
trade negotiations.25 If Japan waited any longer to join the talks, in his view, it
would be too late to help write the TPP’s rules. “Now is our last chance,” Abe said,
“Losing this opportunity would simply leave Japan out from the rule-making in the
world. Future historians will no doubt see that "the TPP was the opening of the
Asia-Pacific Century.”26
Table 3. Japan’s Free Trade Agreements
In Force
Negotiating
Under Discussion
Japan—ASEANa
Japan—Australia

Japan—Brunei
ASEAN+3
Japan—Canada
Japan—Cambodia
ASEAN+6

Japan—Chile
Japan—European Union
Japan—Mongolia
Japan—India
Japan—China—South Korea
Japan—South Korea
Japan—Indonesia

TPP
Japan—Malaysia
Japan—Mexico
Japan—Peru
Japan—Philippines
Japan—Singapore
Japan—Switzerland
Japan—Thailand
Japan—Vietnam
Source: Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs, http://www.mofa.go.jp/policy/economy/fta/index.html.
a. ASEAN stands for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, which consists of Brunei Darussalem, Burma
(Myanmar), Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam.

24 For instance, in his opening statement at a November 2011 press conference to discuss Japan’s decision to explore
joining the TPP talks, Prime Minister Noda said, “as a trading nation, in order to pass down the affluence we have
cultivated to our future generations and to develop our society into one with vigor, we must incorporate the economic
growth of the Asia-Pacific region.” Japanese Prime Minister’s Office, “Press Conference by Prime Minister Yoshihiko
Noda,” Friday, November 11, 2011. In his March 2013 press conference, Prime Minister Abe said “If Japan alone
should become inward-looking, we would have no chance of growth.”
25 Abe specifically mentioned the 16-nation Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), a 16-nation
economic grouping among nearly all East Asian countries plus Australia, India, and New Zealand. Thus, in Abe’s
vision, TPP and RCEP appear to complement rather than compete with one another.
26 “Press Conference by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe,” Friday, March 15, 2013.
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A belief that entering the TPP will help promote economic reforms inside
Japan. Over the years, many experts and government officials have argued that
Japan needs structural reform to spur its economy. A number of Japanese
commentators and officials believe that one way to overcome resistance to reform
from vested interests is through negotiating a comprehensive, high-standard FTA
such as the TPP, which will help reform-minded groups and individuals by giving
them political cover. Also, negotiating the TPP could potentially enable Japan to
gain benefits by trading structural reforms for concessions from negotiating
partners.
A hope that entering the TPP will help Japan’s strategic situation in Asia.
Joining the TPP would complement Japan’s moves in recent years to augment the
U.S.-Japan alliance by strengthening Tokyo’s relationships with middle powers in
and around the Asian region. Behind this push is a concern that China’s rise is
diminishing Japan’s influence and jeopardizing its security and economic interests.
Since leading his party to power in late 2012, Prime Minister Abe has made one of
his top priorities restoring Japanese standing, through revitalizing its economy and
strengthening relations with the United States.27
Japanese Politics and the TPP
The question of whether Japan should join the TPP negotiations has often been front-page news
in Japan and has generated enormous political controversy since serious discussion of the
possibility began in 2009 and 2010. Both Prime Minister Abe’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party
(LDP) and the largest opposition party, the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) are split over the
TPP issue. Until Abe’s March 2013 announcement, the frequent turnover among Japanese prime
ministers—Abe is the seventh premier in as many years—failed to produce the leadership that
might unify the pro-TPP camps across the two parties. These political weaknesses exacerbated the
traditional institutional limitations of the prime minister’s powers, making it easier for motivated
interests to effectively veto government action and stymie the efforts of Abe’s two predecessors
from unambiguously trying to enter the talks. For the moment, Abe appears to have surmounted
these obstacles, in part by using his high popularity ratings as leverage against opponents in his
LDP and by centralizing decision-making on TPP issues in the prime minister’s office. The latter
move could blunt opposition to the TPP within the LDP. Abe came to power in December 2012
after leading the LDP to victory in national elections, ending the DPJ’s roughly three-year reign.
Japan’s powerful agricultural institutions, most notably the nationwide agricultural cooperative
organization (JA), have been the most vocal opponents of joining the TPP, as has been true of
virtually all trade liberalization agreements that Japan has pursued for the past 40-50 years. JA
has called for over 800 farm items to be exempt from tariff elimination.28 Japan’s farm sector has
taken advantage of the fact that Japan’s rural areas are over-represented in the Diet. As a result,
farm lobbies have significant sway in both the ruling LDP and opposition DPJ and have
supported an array of policies that benefit the agricultural sector. For example, many farm
products remain protected behind high tariff barriers such as rice (778%) and wheat (252%). (For

27 See, for instance, Japanese Prime Minister’s Office, “Press Conference by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe,” December
26, 2012; and Shinzo Abe, “Japan is Back,” Speech at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, February 22,
2013.
28 “Abe Surprises on TPP,” The Oriental Economist, Volume 81, No.3, March 2013.
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Japan’s Possible Entry Into the Trans-Pacific Partnership and Its Implications

others, see Table 4.) Additionally, a range of other policies ensure that Japanese farming remains
small scale, performed increasingly by aging and part-time farmers, and generally unproductive
compared to farms in most other countries. The Japanese government provides around ¥1 trillion
(about $12 billion) annually in direct income to farming households.29 The Abe government and
the LDP reportedly are considering a new subsidy package that could be offered to Japan’s farm
sector to compensate for losses that would be expected if a TPP agreement is reached.30
Table 4. Comparative Japanese and U.S. Tariff Rates on Select Agricultural Products
(Average applied ad valorem MFN rates)
Category
Japan
United States
Animal Products
18.9
2.3
Dairy Products
93.3
20.3
Fruits & Vegetables
10.6
4.9
Coffee & Tea
15.3
3.2
Cereals & Preparations
42.0
3.5
Oilseeds, Fats & Oils
9.0
4.6
Sugars and Confectionary
27.2
10.3
Beverages & Tobacco
14.6
15.6
Source: WTO Tariff Profiles.
JA has allied with a variety of other powerful interest groups to mount an aggressive campaign
against entering the TPP. The most significant of these other groups may be the Japan Medical
Association, which argues that TPP will erode if not eliminate Japan’s universal healthcare
insurance system because it will be forced to pay higher prices for medicines and medical
equipment. Many experts argue that until Abe’s March 2013 announcement, Japan’s traditional
agriculture interests, medical lobby, and other TPP opponents successfully controlled the debate
about TPP inside Japan. They have gained the support of scores of lawmakers, including over 200
LDP members (over half the LDP’s parliamentary caucus) that prior to Abe’s decision joined a
group calling for Japan not to join the TPP. Nonetheless, in mid-March, after considerable
internal debate the LDP formally announced it supported Abe’s decision.31 Around the same time,
an LDP panel on the TPP designated five product lines—rice, sugarcane/sugar products, wheat,
dairy products, and beef—as “important items” that must be protected.32 In 2012, prior to the
elections that swept Abe into power, the Abe-led LDP had said it opposed entering the
negotiations unless the final agreement allowed for some exemptions, a position that many
interpreted as designed to appeal to anti-TPP voters. At the time, the LDP also objected to some
investor-state dispute settlement requirements that might be agreed to in the TPP, and argued that
government procurement and financial services must have their basis in Japan's “special

29 Aurelia George Mulgan, “Japan’s New Agricultural Policy Plan Neglects Trade Liberalisation,” East Asia Forum
blog, November 2, 2011, http://www.eastasiaforum.org.
30 “Analysis: New Farm Subsidy May Turn Into Another Pork Barrel,” Nikkei Report, March 26, 2013.
31 Liberal Democratic Party, “LDP's Decision to Participate in the TPP,” March 13, 2013.
32 “LDP Designates Rice, Sugar, Others as ‘Important Items’,” U.S. Embassy Tokyo, Japan Morning Highlights,
March 13, 2013.
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Japan’s Possible Entry Into the Trans-Pacific Partnership and Its Implications

characteristics.”33 It is unclear to what extent these views have or will become Japanese
government positions. The reservations about TPP among many LDP members indicate that, if
Japan enters the talks, the Abe government may face difficulties gaining domestic support for
making painful concessions, particularly if Abe’s public approval ratings decline.
The Views of U.S. Stakeholders
In a December 7, 2011, Federal Register notice, the Office of the USTR solicited the views of
private sector stakeholders on whether Japan should be included in the TPP. USTR received over
100 responses. Around 40% of the responses were from agricultural firms, another 25% came
from manufacturing firms, 15% from services providers, and the remainder from various non-
government organizations (NGOs) and business associations. Some of the responses came from
Japanese companies or associations representing Japanese companies.
In a few cases, the respondents expressed outright opposition to Japan’s participation. One of the
most notable members of this group is the American Automotive Policy Council (AAPC).34 The
AAPC represents the three Detroit-based auto manufacturers—Chrysler, Ford, and General
Motors. In its statement, the AAPC said:
The AAPC opposes Japan joining the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations at this time....
Japan’s trade barriers in the auto sector cannot be addressed easily or quickly, and will
needlessly slow down the negotiations. To date Japan has not indicated a willingness to
change its decades-long practice of maintaining a closed automotive market. Given the
systemic trade imbalance and lack of willingness to reform, a U.S. free trade agreement with
Japan would only lock-in the already one-way trade relationship that Japan’s closed auto
market has created, and significantly delay, if not prevent proceeding with a high quality
TPP trade agreement with other more compatible trade partners in the important and rapidly
growing Pan-Pacific region.
The AFL-CIO also opposes Japan’s participation in the TPP, having stated:
Given the numerous unknowns about the yet unfinished Trans-Pacific FTA, it is difficult to
provide significant technical advice or even formulate well-grounded opinion with respect to
the possible impacts on working families of Japan’s accession to the Trans-Pacific FTA.
As such, the AFL-CIO has serious concerns regarding the premature expansion of the Trans-
Pacific FTA negotiations to include Japan or any other nation before US negotiators first
demonstrate an ability to successfully negotiate an agreement that will produce genuine
benefits for American workers and increase domestic production.
[Japan’s] markets are notoriously closed to foreign goods, and this is not the result of high
tariff barriers.... To gain significant and substantial market access to Japan, the United States
Trade Representative (USTR) would have to adopt a new and revolutionary approach.... If
USTR is not willing to ‘think outside the box’ and abandon its currently slavish approach to

33 Aurelia George Mulgan, “Can Trade Talks Drive Reform in Japan?” Current History, Volume: 111, Issue: 746,
September 2012, p. 242.

34 AAPC, The American Automotive Policy Council’s (AAPC) Views Regarding Japan’s Expression of Interest in the
Tans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) Trade Negotiations, January 13, 2012.
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free trade, it is difficult to see how Japan’s accession to the Trans-Pacific FTA can benefit
American working families.35
In some cases, respondents expressed strong support for Japan’s inclusion in the TPP. For
example, Caterpillar, Inc. argues that the TPP would be the vehicle for addressing Japan’s
remaining non-tariff barriers.36 The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the U.S.-Japan Business
Council, in separate submissions, also expressed support for Japan’s participation in the TPP
negotiations. However, each group asserted that Japan would have to address issues that have
plagued relations with member companies, including regulatory barriers, favored treatment of
insurance and express delivery subsidiaries of Japan Post, and government procurement, among
others.37
Some Members of Congress have weighed in on the issue. For example, in a November 8, 2011,
bipartisan letter to USTR Ron Kirk, the chairmen and ranking Members of the House Ways and
Means Committee and the Senate Finance Committee stated that Japan’s participation “would
represent an opportunity for much needed change in Japan’s approach to international trade.”
They assert that, while Japan is a long-time U.S. ally and friend in Asia,
paramount considerations in evaluating a request relating to a trade agreement must be
whether Japan is willing and able to meet the high standard commitments inherent in U.S.
free trade agreements and whether inclusion would truly open this historically closed market
to the benefit of our companies, workers, and farmers.
These comments and others from stakeholders suggest that the debate within the United States
and negotiations with Japan on the TPP will be difficult and complex. The legacies of a
sometimes contentious bilateral economic relationship have carried over into the TPP
negotiations.
Outlook, Possible Outcomes, and Consequences
Japan’s negotiations with the United States, as well as its negotiations with Australia and New
Zealand, continue with no publically announced deadline or timeframe. The Obama
Administration has stated that it wants to take as much time as necessary but would not let these
negotiations interfere with the pace of the negotiations among the current TPP countries.
If Japan enters the TPP, it could represent a major change in the shape and dynamic of the U.S.-
Japan economic relationship. Over the years, trade policymakers, business representatives, and
regional specialists in both countries have floated the concept of a U.S.-Japan FTA. Until the TPP
talks began in earnest, the idea had not gained traction because the hurdles—Japanese agricultural
policy, problems in auto trade, government regulations and practices—have been too high to
overcome. These same hurdles would need to be overcome if Japan and the United States are able
to work successfully in the TPP.

35 AFL-CIO, Comments in Response to “Request for Comments on Japan’s Expression of Interest in the Proposed
Trans-Pacific Partnership Trade Agreement.”
36 Caterpillar’s Views Regarding Expanding Trans-Pacific Partnership Negotiations to Include Japan, Mexico, and
Canada, January 11, 2012, Submission to the Office of the USTR.
37 U.S. Chamber of Commerce January 13, 2012, letter to USTR and U.S.-Japan Business Council, Public Comment,
Japan’s Expression of Interest in the Proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership Negotiations
.
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The outlook for Japan’s entry into the TPP negotiations remains unclear at this time and depends
on a number of factors. Perhaps the most critical factor is whether Japanese political leaders can
reach a political consensus on whether to proceed with the negotiations and then whether Japan
can reach agreement with the TPP partners on conditions of its entry. The timing of Japan’s
decision on whether to proceed has likely been delayed by domestic politics. Recently, in return
for the LDP and the New Komeito Party agreeing to a vote on the consumption tax, Prime
Minister Noda promised to dissolve the Lower House “at an early date.” As a result, new
elections for the lower house would be called, possibly resulting in changes in control of the
legislature. Therefore the decision on TPP will likely not be reached before this December at the
earliest but most likely later. Japan expert Ed Lincoln has suggested the decision will likely be
pushed even farther out.38
The outcome of this issue could have implications for the U.S.-Japan bilateral trade relationship,
the overall alliance, and the TPP. The TPP issue presents opportunities and challenges for the
United States and Japan. On the one hand, if successful, it could reinvigorate an economic
relationship that has remained steady but stagnant, by forcing the two countries to address long-
standing, difficult issues, and allowing them to raise their relationship to a higher level. On the
other hand, failure to do so could indicate that the underlying problems are too fundamental to
overcome and could set back the relationship. It could signify the failure of the United States
and/or Japan to deal with domestic opposition to a more open trade relationship.
The implications for the overall U.S.-Japanese alliance are less certain. While the TPP would
likely be viewed as strengthening the alliance and failure of the negotiations could be considered
a setback, the alliance is also built on common national security concerns, such as North Korea’s
nuclear program and the economic and military advancement of China, which could well trump
trade problems.
Furthermore, Japan’s possible entry into the TPP is largely viewed, on the one hand, as an
important step in forming a wider Asia-Pacific regional trade arrangement. On the other hand, the
absence of Japan could undermine the credibility of the TPP as a viable regional trade
arrangement and a setback for Asia-Pacific economic integration.

Author Contact Information

William H. Cooper
Mark E. Manyin
Specialist in International Trade and Finance
Specialist in Asian Affairs
wcooper@crs.loc.gov, 7-7749
mmanyin@crs.loc.gov, 7-7653


38 World Trade Online, August 9, 2012.
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