Japan’s Hesitation on Mercosur Talks Amid a Global Free Trade Decline


Japan’s government hesitates to launch trade talks with Mercosur, a South American bloc, as Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva prepares to visit Tokyo on March 24, 2025, sources from Japan’s trade ministry reveal.

Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba faces pressure from businesses eager to tap into Mercosur’s 300 million-strong market, boasting a $3 trillion GDP. Yet, looming summer elections and a U.S.-led trade war under President Donald Trump complicate the decision.

Mercosur unites Brazil, Argentina, Bolivia, Paraguay, and Uruguay, with Brazil and Argentina driving its economic power through beef and soybean exports.

Japan’s firms eye this “last mega-FTA,” especially after the European Union sealed its own deal with Mercosur in December 2024, covering 780 million people. However, Japan’s farmers fear cheap imports—Brazil exports $136 billion in farm goods yearly—threatening local agriculture.

Ishiba navigates a delicate balance as elections approach in July 2025. Politicians dodge the term “EPA,” favoring “framework” to appease rural voters, a tactic rooted in past deals like the CPTPP.

Japan’s Hesitation on Mercosur Talks Amid Amid a Global Free Trade Decline
Japan’s Hesitation on Mercosur Talks Amid Amid a Global Free Trade Decline. (Photo Internet reproduction)

Meanwhile, Mercosur’s internal rifts, notably between Argentina’s libertarian Javier Milei and leftist Lula, stall coordination, evident when a G20 summit meeting fizzled in November 2024.

Progress inches forward despite setbacks. Lula and Ishiba built on talks from May 2024, when former Prime Minister Fumio Kishida visited Brazil. They also built on the November G20 sideline agreement for a strategic partnership.

Still, Japan lags competitors—Mercosur already trades with Singapore and negotiates with South Korea—leaving businesses frustrated as rivals gain ground. Trump’s tariffs, targeting $500 billion in imports, intensify the stakes.

Japan’s Trade Strategy

Japan, with a $68.5 billion U.S. trade surplus in 2023, seeks alternatives like Mercosur to counter protectionism. Brazil, exporting $5.2 billion to Japan yearly, sees opportunity, shifting from past fears of Japanese cars flooding its market.

The narrative pivots to November 2025, when Brazil hosts COP30 and chairs Mercosur. Ishiba’s potential visit could kickstart talks, but electoral outcomes will decide. Failure to act risks Japan losing economic edge, a concern echoed by officials noting Brazil’s growing trade confidence after a decade of China reliance.

Japan’s hesitation reflects a broader struggle. Global free trade falters, yet a Mercosur deal could signal resilience, building on Japan’s CPTPP leadership after Trump ditched the TPP in 2017. Businesses watch closely, knowing delays could cede markets to Europe and Asia.

Behind the figures lies a story of caution and ambition. Japan weighs domestic stability against global opportunity, with Mercosur as a test of its economic resolve. The clock ticks toward summer, when voters may shape this trade saga’s next chapter.

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