TU STUDENTS INVITED TO PARTICIPATE IN FREE 22 OCTOBER ZOOM CONFERENCE ON JAPAN’S ECONOMIC SECURITY POLICY AND THE IMPLICATION TO SOUTHEAST ASIA

Thammasat University students interested in East Asian studies, Japan, political science, economics, history, sociology, ASEAN studies, geoeconomics, and related subjects may find it useful to participate in a free 22 October Zoom conference on Japan’s Economic Security Policy and the Implication to Southeast Asia.

The event, on Tuesday, 22 October 2024 at 9am Bangkok time, is presented by ISEAS – Yusof Ishak Institute, Singapore.

The TU Library collection includes several books about different aspects of Japanese economic security.

Students are welcome to register for the event at this link:

https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/3817282680895/WN_YJbhUkRCSRSH12Fz0OK1OA#/registration

The event website explains:

As the importance of economic security increases, Japan is accelerating its efforts to meet these challenges. In May 2022, the Economic Security Promotion Act was enacted with the key pillars of strengthening supply chain resilience, supporting the development of critical technologies and ensuring the reliability of core infrastructure. Japan also confirmed its cooperation in the field of economic security with various Southeast Asian countries. With highly scalable infrastructure that positions it as a shipping and aviation hub, Singapore is also making significant investments to maintain its position as a critical node in the region. In its commitment to cultivate critical technologies, Singapore announced its National AI Strategy and National Quantum Strategy. In this seminar, Professor Suzuki Kazuto will introduce Japan’s economic security policies and outlook as well as discuss the implications for Southeast Asian countries.

This event is supported by the Embassy of Japan in Singapore.

About the Speaker

Kazuto Suzuki is Professor at the Graduate School of Public Policy at the University of Tokyo, Japan, and Director of the Institute of Geoeconomics at International House of Japan. He received Ph.D. from Sussex European Institute, University of Sussex, England. […]

Earlier this year, on the website of the Institute of Geoeconomics, a research study was published, The shift from economic security to geoeconomics.

Excerpts:

As the West continues to grapple with the challenge of figuring out how to deal with China’s global influence, economic security has become much a talked-about concept among policymakers and experts in Japan, the United States and Europe. In the past few years, the concept has evolved, with countries embedding the idea in their respective national security strategies.

Economic security started out as a defensive concept, but it has now been weaponized to include an offensive element, morphing into a geoeconomic tool for nations to advance their strategic interests.

Japan’s economic security

But what is economic security, in the first place? In Japan’s case, it comes down to five elements, as I state in the forthcoming book “What is Economic Security?,” edited by the Institute of Geoeconomics. First, Japan’s economic security policy emphasizes improving the country’s strategic autonomy to keep acts of economic coercion at bay. With governments increasingly leveraging and weaponizing economic means, Japan’s priority is to fortify its defense against such acts.

Second, Tokyo’s economic security posture is strictly defensive given that its objective is to keep the influence of other countries in check. This is in contrast with the U.S.’ concept of economic security, which includes offensive measures against other countries. Third, Tokyo has gone to great lengths in communicating with the private sector to take the business community’s interests into consideration. That is because some economic security policies —diversification of supply chains, for example — are not necessarily economically efficient, given the additional costs. But, at times, governments need to pursue policies that may not make the most economic sense while aiming for broader national security goals. In this sense, Tokyo has been mindful of the private sector so that it can implement economic security measures efficiently.

Fourth, Japan is seeking to limit its economic security policies — which at times conflict with free-trade principles — as much as it can. Restricting trade with certain countries and imposing restrictions on certain items may violate fundamental World Trade Organization principles, such as non-discrimination and equal national treatment. That is why “small yard, high fence” has become an oft-used phrase, implying that restrictive measures should be limited as much as possible. Fifth, Japan puts great emphasis on achieving “strategic indispensability.” This is a double-pronged approach that boosts strategic autonomy by strengthening supply chains and making Japan so vital in supply chains that foreign governments would think twice before attempting to use economic coercion against it.

Industrial policy aspects

All of these are defensive concepts, but economic security writ large is shifting to include offensive elements. Exhibit A is the U.S. approach to economic security, which includes industrial policy through subsidies and preferential tax treatment as seen in the CHIPS and Science, and Inflation Reduction Acts. Previously, “friend-shoring” was thought to be more effective than on-shoring (attracting industries to one’s country) due to the high cost of domestic production. Yet there is a growing awareness that strategically important industries such as semiconductors and defense should be entirely on home soil, regardless of the cost.

For example, Japan is doubling down on its semiconductor industry with massive subsidies. It is handing out ¥1.2 trillion for Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.’s plants in Kumamoto Prefecture and another ¥1 trillion for Rapidus’ factory in Hokkaido. Furthermore, increased defense spending promised by Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s administration has led to more business for Japan’s defense industry, coupled with policies to promote the export of defense equipment.

This emphasis on fortifying supply chains is not just a matter of stabilizing the supply of parts and materials. It is also an industrial policy that seeks to increase the global competitiveness of key industries that will define the economy of the future. Following Japan-U.S. trade friction in the 1980s and 1990s, Japan’s state-led industrial policy became obsolete, with neoliberal policies centered on deregulation taking over. Free trade and globalization became the norm. But as politics and economics became intertwined in a globalized world, some countries chose to weaponizing economic power — which ironically has led to the resurgence of industrial policies similar to ones that Japan undertook decades ago.

The problem of technology leakage

The evolution of economic security has resulted in a shift in policy objectives from the pursuit of strategic autonomy to strategic indispensability. In Japan’s case, the government is promoting the Program for the Development of Key Technologies for Economic Security (commonly known as “K-Pro”) to promote investment in technology in areas closely related to security, such as the maritime, space, aviation and cyber domains.

But all of that would not mean much if technology is leaked to other countries. That is partly why Tokyo is stepping up legislative efforts to prevent sensitive technological know-how from leaking, while allowing the government to share information with the private sector. The proposed Security Clearance Act is intended to restrict access to government-held information and ensure that only people with proper security clearance are granted access. Japan already has an Act on the Protection of Specially Designated Secrets and a clearance system for defense technology that covers members of government and the private sector, but the new bill would expand the rules to cover areas like space and cyber. In spite of progress, challenges remain. The clearance system only applies to government-owned technology, so sensitive information and technology owned by private enterprises could still leak to other countries. […]

(All images courtesy of Wikimedia Commons)