Japan’s Ishiba mobilisiert Notfallbudget, um Trumps Zölle zu kontern – Wer bezahlt die Rechnung?

Tokio reagiert mit finanziellen Sofortmaßnahmen auf die neueste Handelsprovokation aus Washington.
Die japanische Regierung unter Shigeru Ishiba prescht vor – während die Märkte noch über die Auswirkungen der US-Zollpolitik rätseln. Ein klassischer Fall von 'shoot first, ask questions later' in der Handelsdiplomatie.
Die Notfallliquidität soll heimische Exporteure vor den Launen des Weißen Hauses schützen. Ob das reicht? Die Devisenmärkte zeigen sich skeptisch – der Yen bleibt unter Druck.
Fachleute spotten bereits: 'Wieder mal ein teures Lehrgeld in Sachen Trump-Economics.' Währenddessen bereichern sich die üblichen Verdächtigen an den Volatilitätsausschlägen.
Parliament pushes for debt-funded relief package
The tariffs in question come from the Japan-U.S. trade deal agreed last month. Under that deal, the U.S. agreed to lower some duties on Japanese goods, including cars. But the key problem is still sitting on the table.
The 25% tariffs on automobiles and auto parts haven’t been reduced yet, and no one knows when it will happen. The deal includes a plan to cut them to 15%, but the lack of a timeline is now putting Japan’s exporters in limbo.
This all lands while the Japanese economy is already dealing with rising food prices and weak consumer demand. The sales tax, currently set at 10% for most goods and 8% for food, is getting blamed for worsening the pain. The opposition wants it cut or dropped.
On top of that, Japan’s fiscal situation is already tight. The government is spending 115.5 trillion yen this year, and nearly a quarter of that, 24.5%, is going toward debt repayments. If an emergency budget goes through, analysts estimate it could hit around 10 trillion yen, or $67.68 billion, all of which would need to be borrowed.
Compiling extra budgets has become standard operating procedure in Japan. While other countries cut back their pandemic-era stimulus plans, Japan kept spending. That’s made the national debt problem worse, and now with the Bank of Japan looking at raising interest rates, the cost of all this borrowing could rise even more.
Ishiba defends handshake deal with Trump, skips signing
The lack of a written agreement with TRUMP raised more heat during Monday’s session. Lawmakers questioned why Shigeru didn’t sign an official document during trade talks last month. His answer was blunt: “Creating a document could have delayed the timing of tariff cuts. That was our biggest fear.” Instead, he chose to settle the deal verbally to avoid pushing back the schedule.
Shigeru didn’t try to sugarcoat his thoughts on the U.S. president. “He is not a typical counterpart and could overturn rules,” he said, defending the unusual route he took.
But he also made it clear he’s not backing down from the next step. “I have absolutely no hesitation” to meet Trump again, he said, when asked if he would push for the U.S. to deliver the agreed cuts.
He didn’t say when that meeting might happen. But he did emphasize what comes next. “Both countries will begin executing what was agreed upon, which is harder than agreeing on a deal.”
With that, Shigeru signaled his plan to stay in office long enough to make sure Trump follows through. No more talking. Japan wants results.
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