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Japan’s economy grows at a 1% pace in the last quarter despite Trump’s higher tariffs

Japan’s economy grows at a 1% pace in the last quarter despite Trump’s higher tariffs

2025-08-28Business
Summary

Report Provider: AP News

Author: YURI KAGEYAMA

Date Covered: Last quarter (April-June) of 2025

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  • Report Provider: AP News
  • Author: YURI KAGEYAMA
  • Date Covered: Last quarter (April-June) of 2025
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Published
8/15/2025
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15 min listen
Published
8/15/2025
Publisher
Language
Sources
1 cited
Listen
15 min listen

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  • Report Provider: AP News
  • Author: YURI KAGEYAMA
  • Date Covered: Last quarter (April-June) of 2025
  • Key Findings and Conclusions:

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8/15/2025
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What happened

Report Provider: AP News

Author: YURI KAGEYAMA

Date Covered: Last quarter (April-June) of 2025

Updated [hour]:[minute] [AMPM] [timezone], [monthFull] [day], [year] TOKYO (AP) — The Japanese economy grew at a better than expected 1% annual pace in the last quarter, boosted by exports that held up despite U.S. President Donald Trump’s higher tariffs.The U.S. has imposed a 15% tax on imports from Japan.

That’s higher than before for some products but down from the 25% tariff Trump announced earlier. Real gross domestic product, or GDP, which measures the total value of a nation’s goods and services, expanded 0.3% in the fiscal first quarter compared to the previous quarter, beating analysts’ estimates.

It was Japan’s fifth straight quarter of growth. Japan’s exports grew 2.0% in the period, according to preliminary data from the Cabinet Office. A 90-day pause on higher tariffs for most goods and most trading partners enabled companies to rush some exports to try and beat the higher import duties. But the 15% tariffs took effect as of last week, closing that window.

A surge in visits by foreign tourists has also helped, though it has also raised resentment among some Japanese upset over various aspects of dealing with outsiders. Apart from exports, capital investment rose 1.3% from a year earlier, helping to drive faster growth. But consumer spending remained relatively weak, growing just 0.

2%.Prices have been rising steadily while wages have stagnated. The stronger than expected economic performance in the last quarter raises the likelihood that Japan’s central bank may push ahead with raising its benchmark interest rate from its longstanding level near zero to help cap inflation. The higher tariffs that Trump has imposed to try to get companies to increase manufacturing in the United States have added to pressure on Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, who is facing calls to resign after the ruling Liberal Democrats and their coalition partner the Komeito failed to win majorities in both houses of the parliament.

AP News8/15/2025
Read original at AP News

Source coverage

Report Provider: AP News

Author: YURI KAGEYAMA

Deeper analysis

Full source content

Updated [hour]:[minute] [AMPM] [timezone], [monthFull] [day], [year] TOKYO (AP) — The Japanese economy grew at a better than expected 1% annual pace in the last quarter, boosted by exports that held up despite U.S. President Donald Trump’s higher tariffs.The U.S. has imposed a 15% tax on imports from Japan.

That’s higher than before for some products but down from the 25% tariff Trump announced earlier. Real gross domestic product, or GDP, which measures the total value of a nation’s goods and services, expanded 0.3% in the fiscal first quarter compared to the previous quarter, beating analysts’ estimates.

It was Japan’s fifth straight quarter of growth. Japan’s exports grew 2.0% in the period, according to preliminary data from the Cabinet Office. A 90-day pause on higher tariffs for most goods and most trading partners enabled companies to rush some exports to try and beat the higher import duties. But the 15% tariffs took effect as of last week, closing that window.

A surge in visits by foreign tourists has also helped, though it has also raised resentment among some Japanese upset over various aspects of dealing with outsiders. Apart from exports, capital investment rose 1.3% from a year earlier, helping to drive faster growth. But consumer spending remained relatively weak, growing just 0.

2%.Prices have been rising steadily while wages have stagnated. The stronger than expected economic performance in the last quarter raises the likelihood that Japan’s central bank may push ahead with raising its benchmark interest rate from its longstanding level near zero to help cap inflation. The higher tariffs that Trump has imposed to try to get companies to increase manufacturing in the United States have added to pressure on Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, who is facing calls to resign after the ruling Liberal Democrats and their coalition partner the Komeito failed to win majorities in both houses of the parliament.

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8/15/2025

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This page reviewed 1 article across 1 source, with the latest cited update on 8/15/2025.

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