The shift in U.S. trade policy under President Donald Trump, marked by the April 2 “Liberation Day” announcement, has disrupted long-standing international trade norms. Departing from a rules-based system, the administration has adopted an approach centered on leverage rather than predictability. Stephen Miran, a senior official in the Trump administration, argued that the United States has historically borne disproportionate costs by providing global public goods such as defense security and maintaining the dollar as the world’s primary reserve currency. In response, the current strategy seeks to rebalance these burdens through coercive trade measures.
Tariffs have emerged as the primary mechanism for this recalibration. Within six months of the administration’s second term, a universal 10% tariff was imposed globally, complemented by sector-specific levies—50% on steel and 25% on automobiles. Additionally, selective “reciprocal” tariffs have been applied unevenly across nations. This marks the highest level of protectionism seen in over a century. These measures extend beyond economic objectives, serving as tools to influence non-trade policies. For instance, countries including Mexico, Canada, and China face additional duties if they fail to curb illegal immigration or prevent fentanyl trafficking into the U.S. Reducing bilateral trade imbalances is now framed as a national security imperative.
East Asian economies, particularly Japan and Taiwan, face significant challenges due to this evolving landscape. The unilateral imposition of tariffs and reliance on bilateral negotiations have undermined confidence in multilateral trade frameworks, creating uncertainty across the region. Japan, after extensive talks led by negotiator Ryosei Akazawa, secured a partial reduction of auto and auto parts tariffs from 25% to 15%. However, steel imports remain subject to a 50% duty. While assurances were given regarding upcoming Section 232 tariffs under the 1962 Trade Expansion Act, no formal joint agreement was signed. Instead, each country released separate summaries with notable discrepancies.
A key point of divergence involves a proposed investment initiative. The U.S. portrayed it as a $550 billion transfer from Japan to fund projects selected by Washington, with profits split 90%-10% in favor of the U.S. In contrast, Japanese officials described it as financial support—equity, loans, and guarantees—provided by Japanese institutions to private firms investing in strategic sectors like semiconductors, AI, pharmaceuticals, and critical minerals, with direct equity investments estimated between $5 billion and $10 billion. Domestic criticism in Japan intensified under former Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba due to the ambiguity. A September 4 executive order and a subsequent memorandum of understanding clarified some terms, including a 50-50 profit split during loan repayment periods and a process for project selection. However, the U.S. retains the right to reinstate tariffs if implementation disputes arise, leaving Japan exposed to future risks.
Taiwan’s situation is more precarious. Its export-driven economy, heavily reliant on electronics and semiconductors, faces direct scrutiny under U.S. Section 232 national security investigations. Nearly 80% of its 2024 exports to the U.S. fall under these probes. As of August 15, 2025, the U.S. threatened a 100% tariff on semiconductor imports unless manufacturers commit to domestic production. Additional tariffs of 50% apply to steel and aluminum. Taiwanese supply chains in Southeast Asia, including Vietnam and Malaysia, are also affected due to U.S. efforts to prevent transshipment of Chinese goods through third countries. These restrictions compound existing export controls on dual-use technologies, complicating operations for firms operating in both the U.S. and Chinese markets.
Moreover, Southeast Asian nations popular among Taiwanese investors—such as Vietnam, Thailand, and Cambodia—face similar tariff pressures, reducing the cost advantage of relocating production. In response, Taiwanese companies have significantly increased investments in the United States since 2023, making it the top destination for outbound capital. TSMC alone announced an additional $100 billion investment, bringing its total U.S. commitment to $165 billion—1.8 times the annual budget of the Taiwanese government. While this shift strengthens U.S. semiconductor capacity, it raises concerns about the long-term viability of Taiwan’s domestic tech ecosystem.
Unlike Japan, Taiwan lacks formal security alliances or access to major trade pacts like the CPTPP due to its diplomatic status. This exclusion limits its ability to form strategic economic partnerships, leaving it caught between geopolitical pressures from both Washington and Beijing. Meanwhile, the U.S. retreat from multilateral trade frameworks—evident in its 2017 withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific Partnership and growing reliance on discriminatory tariffs—has weakened regional coordination. Countries are now preoccupied with managing U.S. trade demands rather than addressing shared challenges like overcapacity or overreliance on China.
China, despite U.S. efforts to reduce its economic influence, has maintained resilience. The “China plus one” diversification strategy has lost effectiveness as other Asian economies face U.S. tariffs. Strong demand for Chinese goods in countries like Vietnam constrains Washington’s ability to escalate trade tensions further. Consequently, Beijing has quietly consolidated its regional position. As trust erodes in U.S. leadership, middle powers such as Japan and Taiwan have an opportunity to build alternative economic and security collaborations—not to oppose the U.S., but to navigate its unpredictability. To regain strategic autonomy, Asian economies must prioritize deeper regional and transregional cooperation to build resilient, parallel systems.
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Asia must prioritize regional cooperation for economic resilience amid tariff uncertainty
President Donald Trump’s April 2 “Liberation Day” marked a shift in U.S. policy, departing from the rules-based trade order and embracing power without predictability. Trump administration official Stephen Miran has reasoned that the United States has long shouldered the burden of providing global public goods, such as the global defense umbrella and the dollar as reserve currency, at great cost. Now, allies must pay it back. n nTariffs are the chosen instrument of this recalibrated burden-sharing, used by the administration to extract compensation through trade concessions, direct investments, or even financial transfers. Just six months into its second term, the Trump administration imposed a global 10% tariff, sectoral tariffs of 50% on steel and 25% on autos, and steep “reciprocal” tariffs levied unevenly on individual countries. Protectionism has reached levels unseen in a century. n nTariffs are now being weaponized to coerce partners on noneconomic policy; for example, the White House has placed additional tariffs on countries such as Mexico, Canada, and China if they do not act on their promises to halt illegal immigration or stop the trafficking of fentanyl into the United States. Moreover, reducing American trade deficits with U.S. trading partners is now framed as a matter of national security. In these ways, tariffs are now the tool of choice for the United States to achieve wide-ranging objectives: eliminating the trade deficit, renewing American manufacturing industries, collecting revenue, and applying foreign policy pressure. n nThe fallout for Asia n nThis shift in U.S. trade policy has crucial implications for the resilience of East Asian economies, especially Japan and Taiwan. As Washington arbitrarily assigns reciprocal tariffs to individual economies and negotiates bilaterally with each trading partner, previous assumptions and norms regarding the multilateral trading system have thrown the region into uncertainty. n nJapan’s lopsided deal n nAfter eight trips to the United States by Japan’s lead negotiator, Ryosei Akazawa, the United States and Japan announced a trade deal that reduced the originally announced 25% tariff to 15% on Japanese exports, including autos and auto parts, which represent a crucial part of Japan’s economy and a large share of U.S.-Japan trade. The tariff on metals will remain at 50%, and on the upcoming wave of “Section 232” tariffs to be imposed under the 1962 U.S. Trade Expansion Act for national security reasons on specific imports, the United States reassured Japan that it would not be treated more unfavorably than others. n nThe Japanese side agreed not to subject American autos to additional safety tests (despite low demand for American vehicles in Japan) and agreed to purchase more soybeans, bioethanol, and liquid natural gas from the United States. Moreover, Japan did not lower agricultural tariffs as part of the negotiations. n nCrucially, no joint document outlining this agreement was produced. Each side issued its own fact sheet on the deal with significant gaps in interpretation, especially concerning an investment fund of $550 billion for sectors important for economic security, such as semiconductors, artificial intelligence, pharmaceuticals, steel, shipbuilding, autos, and critical minerals. The White House document, as well as comments by Trump and Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick, portrayed Japan transferring $550 billion to the United States to be invested in projects the United States selects at Trump’s direction, with the profits being shared in a 90%-10% split favoring the United States. n nThe Japanese interpretation of this investment fund offered a different account, portraying Japanese government financial institutions offering equity, loans, and loan guarantees to private companies that invest in the aforementioned sectors. Moreover, equity investments were anticipated to only represent $5 billion to $10 billion. n nIn Japan, departing Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba has been under attack by his own party members and opposition leaders because a high level of uncertainty remains. Further U.S.-Japan negotiations finally delivered a U.S. executive order on September 4 that sets in motion the process to lower tariffs on Japanese cars. An accompanying memorandum of understanding between the two countries fleshed out a selection process for the investment projects and a 50-50 profit split while project loans are being repaid. Because the United States retains the right to hike tariffs over disagreements in the implementation of the investment fund, the trade deal has not eliminated this risk for Japan. n nTaiwan’s closing space n nTaiwan’s economic security is deeply impacted by the United States’ new economic statecraft, especially that aimed at China. Taiwan’s export strength lies in electronics, especially information and communication technology products and semiconductors, which are now subject to U.S. Section 232 investigations. Nearly 80% of Taiwan’s exports to the United States in 2024 fall under the investigations, which the United States has framed as a national security probe. In addition, as of August 15, 2025, the United States has threatened a 100% tariff on semiconductors, with exemptions for firms committed to manufacturing in the United States, and expanded the number of products subject to the 50% tariff on steel and aluminum. n nTaiwanese manufacturing supply chains in Southeast Asia, including Vietnam and Malaysia, are also being punished because the United States is aiming to prevent the “laundering,” or transshipment, of Chinese products through third countries to obscure their origin. These rules are being enacted in addition to U.S. export controls on certain dual-use technologies to China, further squeezing Taiwanese firms that have long done business in both the United States and China. In addition, Southeast Asian countries like Vietnam, Thailand, and Cambodia—popular destinations for Taiwanese manufacturers as they diversify their supply chains away from China—face U.S. tariff rates similar to Taiwan’s, making diversification to Southeast Asia less cost-effective. n nFacing increasing uncertainty and potential tariffs across the supply chain, Taiwanese firms have significantly ramped up investment in the United States since 2023. The United States is now Taiwan’s largest destination for outbound capital. Increased semiconductor investment in the United States is driving a shift in Taiwan’s outbound investment profile. This year, TSMC announced plans to invest an additional $100 billion, for a total of $165 billion, in the United States, equivalent to 1.8 times the Taiwan government’s entire annual budget. This outflow of capital, talent, and technology fuels concerns that the semiconductor ecosystem in Taiwan will weaken. n nUnlike Japan, Taiwan has no formal security or strategic alliance to turn to in Asia, and it is excluded from multilateral trade frameworks. Without formal diplomatic space, Taiwan is unable to join economic groupings like the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement on Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP). Taiwan now finds itself navigating a narrowing corridor, boxed in by high geopolitical walls from both Washington and Beijing. n nChina’s leverage in a reordered region n nThe U.S. withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific Partnership in 2017 indicated an unwillingness to advance trade liberalization. In 2025, the United States now appears to have abandoned free-trade norms based on nondiscrimination and multilateralism. U.S. tariff policy now frames economic relationships with key partners as zero-sum. Partners like Japan and Taiwan are forced to individually strike highly asymmetrical bilateral deals. The more time trade partners spend managing the U.S. tariff offensive, the less capacity they have to deepen coordination with each other on how to manage challenges in their own neighborhood, such as Chinese overcapacity or overdependence on trade with China. China has been allowed to quietly strengthen its position. n nThe United States appears determined to reduce China’s economic dominance by building up domestic manufacturing capacity and reducing China’s presence in other economies’ supply chains. The “China plus one” approach by firms to move supply chains into other countries is now less reliable as the rest of Asia is hit by U.S. tariffs. Furthermore, high demand for Chinese imports in other economies, such as Vietnam, limits how much Washington can continue to escalate its trade war with China. As a result, China is faring much better than expected by navigating the United States’ targeted trade measures. n nRebuilding strategy amid uncertainty n nEach country in Asia is navigating under high uncertainty, and the pace of change is outstripping the region’s capacity to respond. Because trade deals with the United States are now rushed, transactional, and increasingly made under pressure, countries are signing agreements not out of strategic decisionmaking but to avoid even steeper tariffs. Moreover, the World Trade Organization, with divided membership and consensus-based decisionmaking, may no longer be a viable platform for resolving trade disputes or negotiating global rules. The trade interests of members in the region’s multilateral frameworks, like the CPTPP and the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, remain too divided to mount a coherent response to U.S. tariff diplomacy. n nAs one of us previously wrote for Brookings, Trump’s actions have also led to a loss of trust in advancing cooperation on reducing overdependence on China and strengthening economic security. This means a coalition focused on addressing the trade challenges with China cannot be built while the United States treats its allies as economic rivals. The United States is now less prepared to lead, and U.S. allies are less willing to follow, but the Trump administration’s urges for allies to invest in U.S. manufacturing may further foster supply chain bifurcation. A U.S.-centered supply chain for the American market, to keep pace with the administration’s objectives, might indeed become a reality supported by U.S. allies, while the current China-centric supply chain—linked to Southeast Asia—feeds the Global South. n nAs confidence wanes in the United States’ ability to continue to steward the global economy, new forms of leadership in the Asia-Pacific are needed, and middle powers like Japan and Taiwan could use this opportunity to cultivate economic and security partnerships—not to confront the United States, but to strengthen their position in managing an increasingly unpredictable ally. If Asian economies aim to regain agency, they must prioritize regional and transregional cooperation, building parallel structures for economic and security resilience.