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- <text id=94TT0250>
- <title>
- Feb. 28, 1994: Take That! And That!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Feb. 28, 1994 Ministry of Rage:Louis Farrakhan
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TRADE, Page 39
- Take That! And That!
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>With a threat of sanctions, the U.S. tries to tighten the screws
- on Japan without starting a trade war
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by James Carney/Washington and Edward W. Desmond/Tokyo
- </p>
- <p> If posturing and tough talk were all it took to remedy the
- U.S.-Japan trade gap, everything would be fine by now. The grumpy
- Feb. 11 encounter in Washington between Bill Clinton and Japanese
- Prime Minister Morihiro Hosokawa has produced a surplus of bluster.
- "We will not modify our position," Hosokawa warned afterward.
- "It's just not acceptable for the United States to continue
- on the same path," Clinton warned back last week. But as both
- sides grumbled, they tried to keep the brinkmanship within bounds.
- "The intent and fact are to be measured and calm about this,"
- insisted a White House official, even as others waved fists
- at Japan.
- </p>
- <p> Scarcely had Hosokawa settled back in Tokyo than the White House
- struck. It announced that Japan had failed to comply with previous
- trade agreements by denying Motorola fair access to Japan's
- cellular-phone market. "This is a clear-cut and serious case
- of a failure by Japan to live up to its commitments," said U.S.
- Trade Representative Mickey Kantor. He promised that within
- a month his office would publish a list of Japanese companies
- that would be punished--probably through tariffs--if the
- situation is not remedied. One day later, Washington's case
- was bolstered by new Commerce Department figures showing that
- the trade deficit with Japan rose nearly 24% last year, to a
- record $59.3 billion.
- </p>
- <p> The Japanese made their own threat to fight any sanctions by
- accusing the U.S. of a "betrayal of trust"in multinational negotiations
- to reduce tariffs. But even as the Japanese were applauding
- Hosokawa's refusal to cave in to Clinton, his government was
- calculating how to avoid a fight. Early in the week Tokyo was
- unnerved when the yen rose about 6% against the dollar while
- Washington stood by with arms folded. The upward pressure came
- from speculators counting on the U.S. to encourage a stronger
- yen to make American products cheaper in Japan. Because that
- would also cut into the profits of beleaguered Japanese companies
- that sell abroad, a 5% drop in the Japanese stock market quickly
- followed.
- </p>
- <p> Tokyo scrambled to propose conciliatory measures to promote
- imports, speed deregulation, break down monopolies and open
- up government purchasing to outsiders--a standard litany that
- Washington wasn't buying. And the Japanese gave no sign of willingness
- to compromise on the core U.S. demand that their progress in
- opening markets should be measured by "objective criteria"--in effect, guaranteeing that competitive products get a share
- of the market.
- </p>
- <p> The cellular-phone problem illustrates how even the most competitive
- American products--Motorola claims 40% of the global cellular
- market--can be tripped up in Japan. In 1987, when it privatized
- the national phone company, Nippon Telegraph & Telephone, Japan's
- government divided the country into two cellular-phone regions,
- with NTT operating in both and one fully private competitor
- in each. Though it has flourished elsewhere in Japan, Motorola
- maintains that it has been handicapped in the Tokyo-Nagoya corridor,
- the more profitable of the two areas, where its phones are incompatible
- with the NTT transmitting system.
- </p>
- <p> As part of an agreement to give Motorola "comparable market
- access"--reached in 1989 after Washington threatened reprisals--the Japanese government provided the company a slice of the
- cellular-phone bandwidth in the Tokyo-Nagoya region. There was
- a catch: Motorola's new transmitting equipment would have to
- be installed by IDO, the wholly private cellular operator in
- that area. Called upon to build facilities for a competitor,
- IDO dragged its feet. In 1992, at Motorola's request, Washington
- sought and gained a follow-up agreement to speed construction.
- </p>
- <p> Last summer Motorola again protested the slow pace, leading
- the White House back to bargaining with Japan. The U.S. wants
- guarantees that the new system will be up two years earlier
- than IDO's projected completion date in March 1997. In the view
- of IDO president Takeo Tsukada, that would lead his still unprofitable
- company to "certain bankruptcy." Motorola says anything less
- would keep it out of the cellular boom expected to start in
- April, when new regulations permit Japanese consumers to own
- phones instead of just renting them. Tokyo, meanwhile, insists
- that the remaining tangles are just a business dispute between
- private companies. "Washington is asking us to guarantee Motorola's
- business," complains a Japanese official.
- </p>
- <p> Cellular phones are just one of 31 areas covered by trade agreements
- that the U.S. could use as gauges of Japanese intransigence
- and then retaliate. "It's not our desire to be provocative,"
- says a White House official. "But the status quo cannot continue."
- Neither can the present standoff, without the danger of a more
- serious confrontation that nobody wants. Now, does anybody here
- know how to just dabble in a trade war?
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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