China’s State Media Blames Japan’s Economic Troubles on Politics-But the Real Story Is Deeper

Dec 2, 2025

Highlights

  • Japan's new PM Sanae Takaichi warns that a Taiwan conflict could threaten Japan's survival.
  • Japan-China relations have plummeted to their lowest point in years amid accusations of distraction from economic decline.
  • Japan approved a $135 billion stimulus package for semiconductors and AI.
  • Japan faces rising bond yields, which are the highest since 2008.
  • The yen is weakening, currently at 157.9 to the US dollar.
  • Inflation is at 3%, constraining the Bank of Japan's policy options.
  • The strategic split between Asia's two largest economies poses supply chain risks across semiconductors, autos, and defense technology.
  • Japan's stance reflects a G7-wide recalibration and is not isolated nationalism.

China Dailyโ€™s latest commentary (opens in a new tab)โ€”framed as an โ€œAsia-Pacific Pulseโ€ opinion columnโ€”argues that Japanโ€™s new prime minister, Sanae Takaichi, is provoking a diplomatic crisis with Beijing to distract from Japanโ€™s โ€œsecular economic decline.โ€ The article claims Takaichiโ€™s warning that a mainland Chinese attack on Taiwan could constitute a โ€œsurvival-threatening situationโ€ for Japan has plunged bilateral relations to their lowest point in years.

It also portrays Takaichi as a hard-right nationalist aligned with Nippon Kaigi, ties her administration to domestic scandals involving the Liberal Democratic Party, and warns that her fiscal policies could deepen Japanโ€™s massive debt burden, drive yen depreciation, and undermine global market stability. Three future scenarios are laid outโ€”measured de-escalation, prolonged instability, or outright confrontationโ€”with the state-based news source suggesting Japan risks economic self-harm if it continues on its present course.

What Matters for Businessโ€”and Why This Is News

Behind the political framing, several meaningful economic updates emerge:

  • Japan has approved a $135 billion stimulus package emphasizing semiconductors and artificial intelligenceโ€”industries the U.S., EU, and China are simultaneously racing to dominate.
  • Japanese government bond yields are climbing, hitting their highest levels since 2008.
  • The yen is weakening, briefly touching 157.9 per dollar.
  • Inflation sits around 3%, limiting the Bank of Japanโ€™s ability to raise rates without choking consumer demand.

For Western investors, these signals matter: Japanโ€”the worldโ€™s third-largest economyโ€”may be entering a period of higher volatility, tighter financing conditions, and heavier political risk. Supply chains tied to Japanese semiconductors, autos, machinery, and defense technology must prepare for policy-driven turbulence.

REEx: What China Daily Doesnโ€™t Mention

A more balanced reading of events from Rare Earth Exchangesโ„ข suggests:

  • Japanโ€™s shift is not ideological drift but strategic recalibrationโ€”shared by most G7 nations alarmed by Chinaโ€™s military posture in the Taiwan Strait. Donโ€™t underestimate the impacts of Donald Trump and the MAGA transition in the USA as well.
  • A firmer stance toward Beijing is popular with Japanese voters, who increasingly distrust Chinaโ€™s intentions despite economic interdependence.
  • Fiscal stimulus is hardly unique to Japanโ€”China, the U.S., and Europe are similarly deploying state-directed investment to counter slowing growth and industrial competition.
  • Chinaโ€™s suggestion that Japan is โ€œdestabilizing the regionโ€ ignores that Tokyoโ€™s moves are largely reactive to Beijingโ€™s assertiveness, not the cause of it.

Bottom Line

For global markets, the key risk is not Japan โ€œsliding to the hard right,โ€ as China Daily claimsโ€”but a deepening strategic split between Asiaโ€™s two largest economies at a time when both are central to global supply chains.

Disclaimer: This article is based on reporting from China Daily, a state-owned media outlet. All information should be independently verified before forming business, policy, or investment conclusions.

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