USA and Japan strengthen industrial policy cooperation

Joe Biden and Fumio Kishida

The two heads of state agreed on a virtual summit on Friday.

(Photo: imago images/ZUMA Wire)

Tokyo The United States and Japan want to work more closely together on economic security. As US President Joe Biden and Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida decided at an online summit on Friday, the partners want to supplement their so-called 2+2 talks between foreign and defense ministers with an economic 2+2 meeting between foreign and economic ministers.

The background to the new talks is growing concern about China’s military and economic influence. Both governments therefore want to work more closely together on the reorganization of supply chains and technology development and coordinate their reactions to China’s foreign and economic policy.

In addition to supply chains, the main topics of the new discussion format should also be technology investments and the setting of standards, Japan’s business newspaper Nikkei quoted an unnamed senior US official as saying. “We think these are areas where the United States and Japan can up their game and take a much more active role at such a critical time.”

The attempt to close ranks economically is part of closer security policy cooperation. Biden and Kishida also discussed Russia’s threat to Ukraine and its support for Taiwan, which wants to unite the offshore island ROC with the mainland by force if necessary. “But I will not go into further details,” Kishida said at the subsequent press conference regarding China.

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In addition, Kishida invited the US President to a summit in Japan, which should also include the heads of state and government of the other two members of the so-called Quad, India and Australia. The Quad is a loose confederation of states in which the four countries exchange views on security policy in Asia and economic developments.

increase independence from China

The alliance of four is part of the US strategy of supplementing previous bilateral alliances with multilateral alliances and global connections in order to build a counterweight to China. One example is the military alliance between Australia, Britain and the United States (Aukus), which Japan is moving towards this month through a troop exchange agreement with Australia. Japan also held 2+2 talks with Germany, Indonesia and France this month.

Economic cooperation is becoming an increasingly important part of the emerging network of alliances in Asia. The USA and Japan are among the trendsetters in the attempt to increase security of supply by reorganizing the supply chains and by locating semiconductor and battery factories with state support.

One aspect is reducing dependency on China for many important products and components. Japan has been providing financial support to companies relocating factories from China to Japan or Southeast Asia since 2020.

However, the trend towards economic cooperation also has a military side. For example, the US Navy has set up a “Japan Tech Bridge” for its large Japanese bases, through which local manufacturers are to be won over as suppliers to the US armed forces.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken emphasized the geostrategic aspect of the economic and technology partnership in mid-January. “When Japanese and American researchers bring their mutually complementary strengths to bear, we can outperform and outperform each other,” Blinken said after a 2+2 foreign policy talk between the two countries.

More: Japan and Australia are strengthening military cooperation – laying the foundation for another alliance

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