Trump’s Japan Negotiation Strategy: Implications for Taiwan

Published in The United Daily News
(Taiwan) on 28 July 2025
by Tang Shao-cheng (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Matthew McKay. Edited by Laurence Bouvard.
In his negotiations with Japan last week, President Donald Trump drew on his business background and deal-oriented mindset, deploying a strategy of maximum pressure diplomacy. One could describe the approach as demanding an outrageous price but settling for a mere premium and one that bore all the hallmarks of a con artist, ultimately forcing Japan to make concessions in the agricultural and automotive markets. Although it was packaged as a “win-win,” in reality the deal was an asymmetric transaction dominated by psychological warfare, with Trump’s threat of punitive tariffs at its core.

Trump’s strategy hinged on setting an extremely high negotiating threshold: He threatened to impose a 25% tariff on Japanese automobile imports, placing Japan under intense psychological pressure. Subsequently, he offered limited concessions in opening up the agricultural market, such as lowering tariffs on high-priced alcoholic beverages and fruit, leading Japan to accept a lopsided agreement. He further emphasized unilateralism and brought pressure to bear on areas that would directly benefit American farmers and working class voters, thereby ensuring domestic support.

From a substantive point of view, Japan’s agricultural and automotive concessions will generate medium to long-term challenges. Agriculture, in particular, will face difficulties, as local and small-scale farmers get hit by low-priced American agricultural products. And while the automotive industry will not immediately be affected, the fact that it was used as a bargaining chip in the negotiations increases policy risks and uncertainty. However, since Japan had long prepared for developments in the agricultural sector, and Japanese consumers have never been particularly keen on American cars, the market responded with short-term optimism. On the day of the negotiations, Japanese stocks surged by 1,500 points, reflecting positive investor readings that the worst-case scenario had been averted. This outcome helped mitigate the immediate impact of the trade war, but in the medium to long term, the high price of these concessions and unresolved structural pressures will undermine the competitiveness of Japanese industry.

Taiwan, likewise an export-oriented economy, will have to carefully evaluate its response options under different tariff levels if confronted with a similar extreme pressure strategy. If the U.S. starts high and ends low, ultimately imposing only a 10–20% tariff, then on the face of it, Taiwan will have achieved a tariff reduction “victory.” But if this comes at the cost of concessions in key sectors such as agriculture, information and communications technology, or semiconductors, it will effectively constitute a forced compromise — one that will seriously erode industrial autonomy and policy space.

Conversely, tariffs between 20% and 30% would constitute a textbook example of extreme pressure. If Taiwan opts for a targeted easing of restrictions to stabilize exports, it may avoid short-term risks but trigger industrial backlash and social pressure. The offshoring of its domestic enterprises could intensify, and problems such as internal demand imbalance and job losses emerge.

If tariffs were to exceed 30%, this would mean a de facto trade war. If Taiwan chooses to hold the line and not concede its core industries, exports may suffer in the short term, but opportunities for industrial upgrading and market diversification could arise, such as by shifting toward the ASEAN and Indian markets and by strengthening the resilience of domestic supply chains and local demand.

In short, Trump frequently bluffs and issues extreme threats — such as imposing 50% tariffs and withdrawing from the World Trade Organization — to create catastrophic expectations and force his opponents to make concessions under intense pressure. He is also adept at sending ambiguous signals through social media to sow confusion among markets and negotiation counterparts alike, having employed similar tactics in negotiations with China, Japan, Mexico, Canada, among other countries. Tough and controversial though these tactics may be, they have proven remarkably effective in consolidating political support and quickly reaching agreements.

For any country, Trump-style negotiations pose a challenge, not just to economic interests, but also in terms of psychological resilience and strategic endurance. Taiwan should proactively put contingency mechanisms in place, including industrial compensation, crisis communication and multilateral coordination capabilities. At the same time, it should strengthen both its voice and influence in public discourse and its economic safety net. This will help Taiwan avoid traps that appear to be win-win but actually result in sacrifice, allowing Taiwan to remain steadfast in protecting its core interests amid international pressure.

The author is president of Taiwan’s Asia Pacific Research Foundation


川普對日談判策略對台灣的啟示

2025-07-28 07:53 聯合報/ 湯紹成/亞太綜合研究院院長

美國川普總統以商人背景與交易導向思維,對日本的談判展現其極限施壓外交策略,亦可稱為漫天要價、就地還錢,充滿江湖術士的調性,最終促使日本在農產品與汽車市場上讓步,儘管包裝為「雙贏」,實質上是川普以懲罰性關稅威脅為核心的心理戰主導的不對等交易。

川普策略核心是設立極高談判門檻。他曾揚言對日本進口汽車課徵25%關稅,對日本構成強大心理壓力,接著在農產品市場開放上釋出有限讓利,如高價酒類與水果降低關稅進口,讓日本接受不對等協議。此外,川普強調單邊主義,並將施壓聚焦於能對美國農民與工人選民產生直接利益的領域,確保在國內獲得支持。

從實質面看,日本在農業與汽車領域的讓步將帶來中長期壓力。尤其農業,地方與小型農戶將遭遇美國低價農產品衝擊;汽車產業雖未立即受損,但被列為談判籌碼,增添政策風險與不確定性。但因日方在農產品方面已準備多時,且日本人不喜歡開美國車,故市場反應短期樂觀,日股在談判日大漲1500點,反映投資人對「避開最壞情況」的正面解讀,短期減緩貿易戰衝擊,中長期則因讓步代價高昂、結構性壓力未解,對日本產業競爭力不利。

台灣同樣是出口導向型經濟,若遭遇類似極限施壓策略,應審慎評估不同關稅層級下的應對選擇。若美方高開低走、最終僅課10–20%,台灣表面取得減稅「戰果」,但若以農業、資通訊或半導體等關鍵產業作交換,實為被迫讓步,對產業自主性與政策空間將造成嚴重侵蝕。

反之,若關稅介於20–30%之間,乃屬典型極限施壓,若台灣選擇有限開放以穩住出口,短期雖可避險,卻將引發產業反彈與社會壓力。國產企業外移恐加劇,內需失衡、就業流失問題將浮現。

若關稅超過30%以上,此為實質貿易戰。若台灣選擇守住底線、不讓出核心產業,雖短期出口受創,卻有機會反推產業升級與市場多元化,例如轉向東協、印度市場,並強化本地供應鏈與內需韌性。

總之,川普經常虛張聲勢、設定極端威脅,如課徵50%關稅與退出WTO,製造災難性預期,迫使對手在高壓下讓步。他亦擅長透過社群媒體釋放模糊訊號,擾亂市場與談判對手判斷。川普在與中國、日本、墨西哥、加拿大等國的談判中皆使用類似操作,雖手法強硬具爭議,但在鞏固政治支持與快速達成協議方面效果顯著。

川普式談判對任何國家而言,挑戰的不只是經濟利益,更是心理素質與戰略耐性。台灣應提早建構應變機制,包括產業補償、危機溝通與多邊協調能力。同時應強化自身談判話語權與經濟安全網,以免陷入「看似雙贏、實則犧牲」的陷阱,在國際壓力下仍能堅守核心利益。
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