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 Dailyโs latest commentary (opens in a new tab)โframed as an โAsia-Pacific Pulseโ opinion columnโargues that Japanโs new prime minister, Sanae Takaichi, is provoking a diplomatic crisis with Beijing to distract from Japanโs โsecular economic decline.โ The article claims Takaichiโs warning that a mainland Chinese attack on Taiwan could constitute a โsurvival-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 Japanโs massive debt burden, drive yen depreciation, and undermine global market stability. Three future scenarios are laid outโmeasured de-escalation, prolonged instability, or outright confrontationโwith the state-based news source suggesting Japan risks economic self-harm if it continues on its present course.
Table of Contents
What Matters for Businessโand 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 intelligenceโindustries 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 Japanโs ability to raise rates without choking consumer demand.
For Western investors, these signals matter: Japanโthe worldโs third-largest economyโmay 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 Doesnโt Mention
A more balanced reading of events from Rare Earth Exchangesโข suggests:
- Japanโs shift is not ideological drift but strategic recalibrationโshared by most G7 nations alarmed by Chinaโs military posture in the Taiwan Strait. Donโt 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 Chinaโs intentions despite economic interdependence.
- Fiscal stimulus is hardly unique to JapanโChina, the U.S., and Europe are similarly deploying state-directed investment to counter slowing growth and industrial competition.
- Chinaโs suggestion that Japan is โdestabilizing the regionโ ignores that Tokyoโs moves are largely reactive to Beijingโs assertiveness, not the cause of it.
Bottom Line
For global markets, the key risk is not Japan โsliding to the hard right,โ as China Daily claimsโbut a deepening strategic split between Asiaโs 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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