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Japan will not make concessions in two-way trade talks with US: Nikkei

Japan will not make concessions in two-way trade talks with US: Nikkei
April 28, 2017

TOKYO - Japan will not make concessions on issues such as farm tariffs in two-way trade talks with the United States as it did for the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), Japanese Finance Minister Taro Aso told the Nikkei business daily in an interview.

The two started an economic dialogue this month and Vice President Mike Pence put Tokyo on notice that Washington wanted results "in the near future", adding that the talks could lead to negotiations on a two-way trade deal.

"If we do bilateral negotiations with the United States, we can't make any concessions," Aso said in Thursday's interview.

"It'd be good if the U.S. joined the TPP later on, once it understands that a free trade agreement would have tougher terms."

In January, President Donald Trump withdrew the United States from the 12-nation TPP, and stressed that Washington would pursue bilateral trade talks.

Washington probably would want to give an answer by its mid-term elections in 2018, Aso said, the Nikkei added.

Aso, who also serves as deputy prime minister, said that the TPP without the US could be ratified "quickly", adding there is no chance for renegotiation, the report said.

"Since we went to the trouble of spending three years," in negotiating the trade pact, "it should be ratified," the Nikkei quoted Aso as saying. "There will be no renegotiation of terms."