US commerce secretary says trade documents wanted by Japan are 'weeks away'

US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick says the US has reached mutual trade understandings with Japan and South Korea. - REUTERS/Filepic
TOKYO: U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said in a CNBC interview on Tuesday that documents memorializing trade agreements with Japan and South Korea -- a sensitive topic in Tokyo -- are "weeks away" from being ready.
AI Brief
- Prime Minister Ishiba is under pressure after election losses and trade deal criticism.
- Japan avoided formalising the US trade deal to speed up tariff cuts on its goods.
- The US agreed to lower car import tariffs from Japan but gave no timeline for implementation.
He has said Japan skipped this to avoid delaying a reduction in U.S. tariffs on Japanese goods.
Lutnick told CNBC the United States has reached a common understanding with both Japan and South Korea on these trade agreements.
Under the deal reached last month, the U.S. agreed to reduce tariffs on Japanese car imports to 15% from the previous 27.5%, but did not announce when the change would take effect.
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