WASHINGTON – Japan and the United States will negotiate a bilateral trade agreement that will serve as a “model” for other countries, US Vice President Mike Pence said Tuesday in Tokyo.
Speaking after talks with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, he reiterated Washington’s position that US businesses have faced unfair obstacles in Japan.
“The United States has had a trade imbalance with Japan for too long. American products and services too often face barriers to compete fairly in Japanese markets,” he said, standing alongside Abe.
“The best opportunity for free, fair and reciprocal trade will come in a bilateral trade agreement.”
Abe and US President Donald Trump agreed in September to negotiate a trade pact, easing fears that Japan could be next in line in the White House’s tariff offensive.
“When completed we’re confident that this agreement will establish terms on goods and services,” Pence said.
“The coming US-Japan trade agreement will be a model for the Indo-Pacific.”
The United States and Japan, the world’s first and third largest economies, together make up about 30 percent of global GDP and have long had trade ties that are both fractious and interconnected.