Japan's New Regionalism: The Politics of Free Trade Talks with Mexico. Japan's New Regionalism: The Politics of Free Trade Talks with Mexico.

Japan's New Regionalism: The Politics of Free Trade Talks with Mexico‪.‬

Journal of East Asian Studies 2003, Sept-Dec, 3, 3

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Publisher Description

Since late 1998, Japan reversed its exclusive support for the multilateral trade regime and endorsed for the first time bilateral and preferential trade pacts, signing one with Singapore, negotiating another with Mexico, and announcing free trade talks with South Korea. The newfound Japanese interest in pursuing free trade agreements (FTAs) therefore represents one of the most significant departures in Japanese trade diplomacy of the past half-century. This article seeks to explain the birth of a preferential trading policy in a country that until recently had been a staunch multilateralist, and to analyze the reasons for the launch of FTA negotiations between Japan and Mexico. Indeed, one of the most remarkable aspects of Japan's new trade bilateralism is its cross-regional orientation, seeking preferential trade with a Latin American nation. Trade negotiations with Mexico are of great consequence to the development of Japan's FTA strategy for one more reason. Japan has embarked on this new regionalism to offset the negative effects of competing FTAs, but at the same time it has tried to minimize agricultural concessions to bilateral trade partners. Mexico is the first large agricultural exporter that Japan has approached for trade negotiations and is therefore an important test for the success of the Japanese FTA strategy. Mexico is an attractive FTA partner to Japan because the modest volume of bilateral trade reduces the chances of major domestic adjustment (which at this initial stage could derail the consolidation of the FTA policy shift); because Mexico's extensive network of FTAs could offer access to Japanese products and firms in other markets; and more fundamentally, because Japan is seeking to correct the perceived trade diversion effects of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). Whether Japan can pull off this FTA with Mexico, however, largely hinges on the ability of Japanese trade bureaucrats and industrial interests to neutralize the opposition of the agricultural lobby; or conversely, on the willingness of the Mexican government to accept important exceptions to agricultural liberalization.

GENRE
Non-Fiction
RELEASED
2003
1 September
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
45
Pages
PUBLISHER
Lynne Rienner Publishers
SIZE
244.4
KB

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