U.S. Secretary of Commerce to visit Japan
November 8, 2021
WASHINGTON (Jiji Press) — U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo will visit Japan on Nov. 15, her first trip to the Asian nation since assuming office in March this year, the Department of Commerce said Sunday.
U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai will also visit Japan on the same day.
The two are expected to discuss with Japanese officials a possible review of the United States’ additional tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from Japan, introduced by the administration of former U.S. President Donald Trump.
Furthermore, the U.S. side hopes to reaffirm its cooperation with Japan over measures to keep China in check in the field of economy.
The current administration led by President Joe Biden considers China its most serious competitor.
With China in mind, Biden announced after the end of the East Asia Summit last month his intention to consider building a new economic framework in the Indo-Pacific region.
The United States is urgently working to repair relations with its allies, which soured under the Trump administration, as it hopes to form a coalition against China in trade policies.
In late October, the United States and the European Union agreed to end their trade disputes, including those on steel and aluminum.
A focal point of Raimondo’s trip to Japan will be on whether there will be progress in the United States’ moves regarding the extra tariffs on Japanese steel and aluminum. On Thursday, Raimondo said, “We do want to work with our allies in Japan to resolve” the tariff issue.
After staying in Tokyo, Raimondo will visit Singapore for two days from Nov. 16, and then pay a visit to Malaysia on Nov. 18.
"World" POPULAR ARTICLE
-
Japan Prime Minister Seeks Cooperation Against Disinformation During Online Meeting of International Summit for Democracy
-
China Mutes Memorialization of Reformer Hu Yaobang; Memories Could Spark Critique of Xi Administration
-
Summer Sonic Music Festival to Be Held Also in Thailand
-
Search Continues for Missing People After 72-Hour Window Ends in Quake-Hit Taiwan; Weather Complicating Rescue Efforts
-
Japanese Director of U.N. Agency Gets First-Hand Look at Horrors, Broken Spirits of Gaza
JN ACCESS RANKING
- Japan Lags in Efforts to Gain Value from Human Resources; Govt Working to Increase Usage
- Bank of Japan Governor: Mortgages Not Expected to Rise Significantly After End to Negative Interest Rate Policy
- M6.0 Earthquake Hits Japan’s Tohoku Region; Fukushima, Iwate, Miyagi Prefectures Observe 4 on Japanese Scale With No Risk of Tsunami
- Cherry Blossoms Draw Crowd to Tokyo’s Ueno Park; Viewing Season Kicks Off to Slow Start
- Shohei Ohtani’s Former Interpreter Ippei Mizuhara Appears in School Textbook; Publisher Considers Replacing Content