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New forms of cooperation are emerging, and countries are increasingly turning to smaller, more flexible alliances to navigate uncertainty. In this new landscape, partnerships between like-minded actors matter more than ever, and the relationship between the European Union and Japan is a key example of this.As global governance continues to evolve, this episode asks: how can the EU and Japan not only adapt to change, but actively shape it? This episode of The World Stage is in collaboration with the podcast Making sense of EU by the Université libre de Bruxelles. In the episode we explore how the EU and Japan are adapting to a more fragmented and unpredictable world. Together with Professor Akiko Fukushima (Tokyo Foundation for Policy Research) and Dr Wrenn Yennie Lindgren (Norwegian Institute of International Affairs), we unpack the evolving balance between multilateralism and so-called “smaller clubs” — from ASEAN to the Quad — and what this means for global governance. We also discuss where the EU and Japan can act together to shape new rules, relying as much on trust and dialogue.This episode is hosted by Alix Bullman (Univerisité libre de Bruxelles). It is also a part of the NUPI-led project “Navigator” which receives funding from the European Union's Horizon Europe research and innovation programme under the grant agreement ID: 101094394. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Host: Cindy Allen Show: Simply Trade – Cindy's Version Published: March 20, 2026 Length: ~15 minutes Presented by: Global Training Center Wishlist: Importers Just Want IEEPA Refunds + CBP's New “Customs Business” Bombshell Cindy Allen delivers her signature Taylor Swift–inspired trade update (“Wishlist” from the latest album), channeling importers' singular desire: “I just want you, Mr. Refund.” She covers DHS budget chaos, petrodollar threats from the Strait of Hormuz closure, Jones Act waiver talks, and a seismic CBP ruling that redefines classification, OCR, and CF-5106 work as customs business. What You'll Learn in This Episode DHS funding crisis No Congressional budget agreement—TSA, FEMA, non-LEO CBP staff (Office of Trade, admins) not getting paid; TSA lines lengthening as agents take second jobs. CBP officers funded via prior “big beautiful bill,” but broader agency operations strained. No impact yet from Kristi Noem's DHS exit. Strait of Hormuz & petrodollar shift 20–40% of world oil flow halted; India secured safe passage deal, China negotiating oil payments in yuan—challenging petrodollar system (U.S. dollar as reserve currency since 1970s OPEC deal). Could erode USD value, force global banks to rethink reserves, impact U.S. debt/economy beyond just gas prices (countries releasing strategic reserves for short-term relief). Jones Act & USMCA updates Administration eyeing Jones Act waivers for chemicals, energy, fertilizers to ease oil crisis transport limits. U.S.–Mexico technical teams meeting regularly on USMCA progress (extension preferred over renegotiation); Canada tensions delay trilateral talks. Trump postpones China trade trip. CBP bombshell: HQ 350722 ruling Internal advice ruling deems OCR conversion of shipping data, classification for importers, and CF-5106 filings (importer/ultimate consignee setup) as “customs business” requiring licensed customs brokers. Overturns prior practice where importers could use non-broker consultants for these (often to check broker work or build databases). Likely legal challenges ahead; chills AI/OCR tools offered directly to importers. IEEPA Refund “Wishlist” Deep Dive Importers want simple answers on CBP's CAPE refund process (Excel declarations via ACE)—but open questions persist: Court actions/protests needed for final vs. protestable (180-day window) entries? CAPE scope: Simple IEEPA refunds only, or complex EU/Japan agreements (15% caps), reconciliation, drawback? Entry summary updates in ACE (system of record)? What if an entry's accidentally omitted—does Treasury keep funds? Judge indicated all IEEPA duties unlawful; no clear administrative refund mechanism yet. Key Takeaways Importers: Review internal processes against HQ 350722; consult brokers/attorneys on consultant/AI/OCR workflows. Read CBP's full ruling; track IEEPA CAPE mechanics and court filings. Travel tip: Extra time for TSA lines. Watch petrodollar erosion and fuel surcharge ripple effects. Credits Host: Cindy Allen Producer: Annik Sobing Subscribe & Follow • YouTube • Spotify • Apple Podcasts Join the conversation with fellow trade professionals in the Trade Geeks Community: https://globaltrainingcenter.com/portal/?utm_source=SimplyTradePodcast
Today we learn that 14 States are now targeted as they withhold Voter Rolls. In other news we see that the Assistant U.S. Attorney blasts Los Angeles after it votes to ban ICE Agents from wearing masks, and finally how the UK, EU and Japan can crash the Dollar. 00:00 SNAP Data 04:58 Voter Roll 08:38 ICE Activity 10:49 Corrupt Judges 17:00 Ukraine 20:21 Dollar
Today we learn that 14 States are now targeted as they withhold Voter Rolls. In other news we see that the Assistant U.S. Attorney blasts Los Angeles after it votes to ban ICE Agents from wearing masks, and finally how the UK, EU and Japan can crash the Dollar. 00:00 SNAP Data 04:58 Voter Roll 08:38 ICE Activity 10:49 Corrupt Judges 17:00 Ukraine 20:21 Dollar
Today we learn that 14 States are now targeted as they withhold Voter Rolls. In other news we see that the Assistant U.S. Attorney blasts Los Angeles after it votes to ban ICE Agents from wearing masks, and finally how the UK, EU and Japan can crash the Dollar. 00:00 SNAP Data 04:58 Voter Roll 08:38 ICE Activity 10:49 Corrupt Judges 17:00 Ukraine 20:21 Dollar
Why Trump's deals with the EU, Japan may not be templates for Canada in trade talks Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Caleb Silver – Editor-in-Chief of Investopedia joins the show to discuss – EU/Japan trade deals. Sports with Brenden Wiese. Also, ABC guests catch us up on the worldly news
Commentary from Jerome Powell on the banking space spurred some headlines but did little to move vastly unchanged futures. Kevin Hincks points to Big Tech earnings from Alphabet (GOOGL) and Tesla (TSLA) to be the biggest movers of the week. They face one headwind: an SPX and NDX moving into overbought territory. Kevin also touches on the EU and Japan seeking to continue tariff talks with the U.S.======== Schwab Network ========Empowering every investor and trader, every market day.Subscribe to the Market Minute newsletter - https://schwabnetwork.com/subscribeDownload the iOS app - https://apps.apple.com/us/app/schwab-network/id1460719185Download the Amazon Fire Tv App - https://www.amazon.com/TD-Ameritrade-Network/dp/B07KRD76C7Watch on Sling - https://watch.sling.com/1/asset/191928615bd8d47686f94682aefaa007/watchWatch on Vizio - https://www.vizio.com/en/watchfreeplus-exploreWatch on DistroTV - https://www.distro.tv/live/schwab-network/Follow us on X – / schwabnetwork Follow us on Facebook – / schwabnetwork Follow us on LinkedIn - / schwab-network About Schwab Network - https://schwabnetwork.com/about
European Digital Sovereignty: Breaking Tech DependencyEpisode NotesHeterodox Economic Foundations (00:00-02:46)Current economic context: Income inequality at historic levels (worse than pre-French Revolution)Problems with GDP as primary metric:Masks inequality when wealth is concentratedFails to measure human wellbeingAmerican example: majority living paycheck-to-paycheck despite GDP growthAlternative metrics:Human dignity quantificationPlanetary health indicatorsCommons-based resource managementCare work valuation (teaching, healthcare, social work)Multi-dimensional inequality measurementPractical examples:Life expectancy as key metric (EU/Japan vs US differences)Education quality and accessibilityDemocratic participationIncome distributionDigital Infrastructure Autonomy (02:46-03:18)European cloud infrastructure development (GAIA-X)Open-source technology adoption in public institutionsLocal semiconductor production capacityNetwork infrastructure without US-controlled chokepointsIncome Redistribution via Tech Regulation (03:18-03:53)Digital services taxation modelsGraduated taxation based on market concentrationLabor share requirements through tax incentivesSME ecosystem development through regulatory frameworksHealth Data Sovereignty (03:53-04:29)Patient data localization requirementsIndigenous medical technology developmentEuropean-controlled health datasets for AI trainingContrasting social healthcare vs. capitalistic healthcare modelsAgricultural Technology Independence (04:29-04:53)European research-driven precision farmingFarm management systems with European values (cooperative models)Rural connectivity self-sufficiency for smart farmingInformation Ecosystem Control (04:53-05:33)European content moderation standardsConcerns about American platforms' rule changesPublic funding for quality news contentTaxation mechanisms on disinformation spreadDemocratic Technology Governance (05:33-06:17)Algorithmic impact assessment frameworksEvaluating offline harm potentialDigital rights enforcement mechanismsCountering extremist content proliferationMobility Data Sovereignty (06:17-06:33)Public transportation data ownership by European citiesVehicle data localization requirementsEuropean component requirements for autonomous vehiclesTaxation Technology Independence (06:33-06:48)Tax incentives for European tech adoptionPenalties for dependence on US vendorsStrategic technology sector preferencesClimate Technology Self-Sufficiency (06:48-07:03)Renewable energy management softwareCarbon accounting toolsPrioritizing climate technology in economic planningConclusion: Competing Through Rights-Based Innovation (07:03-10:36)Critique of American outcomes despite GDP growth:Declining life expectancyHealthcare bankruptcyGun violenceEuropean competitive advantage through:Human rights prioritizationEnvironmental protectionDeterministic technology developmentConstructive vs. extractive economic modelsPotential to attract global talent seeking better quality of lifeReframing "overregulation" criticisms as human rights defenseBuilding rather than extracting as the European model
De volledige uitzending van blckbx today #338, maandag 7 oktober 2024, is te bekijken via: https://www.blckbx.tv/livestreams/blckbx-today-2024-10-07Maandag 7 oktober 2024– Hoe heeft 7 oktober plaats kunnen vinden? – Biometrische gegevens verplicht bij bezoek aan Schengenlanden – Japanse mRNA vaccins met snellere eiwitspikes Gasten: auteur en journalist Ab Gietelink, blckbx-journaliste Laura Oorschot en emeritus hoogleraar Pierre Capel.Presentatie: Erwin TaamsSupport the showWaardeer je deze video('s)? Like deze video, abonneer je op ons kanaal en steun de onafhankelijke journalistiek van blckbx met een donatieWil je op de hoogte blijven?Telegram - https://t.me/blckbxtvTwitter - / blckbxnews Facebook - / blckbx.tv Instagram - ...
#SCALAREPORT: #CHIPS: The US, EU, Japan and Taiwan vs the untrustworthy PRC. Chris Riegel, CEO Scala.com @Stratacache..com, #STRATACACHE > https://www.bloomberg.com/news/videos/2024-04-08/tsmc-gets-11-6b-in-us-grants-loans-for-chip-plants-video undated Peking train
Generated by Tailor.Get your own personalized daily podcast! Sign up for freeIn this episode, we discuss various funding and support initiatives introduced by the Indian government to boost the startup ecosystem, as well as recent funding news from Indian startup Onsurity. We also explore Automaze's innovative zero-equity solution for startup founders. Additionally, we deep-dive into the evolving tech collaboration between the EU and Japan, particularly in areas such as AI, cybersecurity, and chips. Join us to stay updated on the latest developments in the world of technology and startups. Music: Mosaic [Electro] by Hardcore Scm. Licensed under: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/News articles cited in this episode:- Insurtech startup Onsurity raises $24 million from IFC, other investors https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/funding/insurtech-startup-onsurity-raises-24-million-from-ifc-other-investors/articleshow/104275319.cms- EU sees 'convergence' with Japan on AI: official https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/technology/eu-sees-convergence-with-japan-on-ai-official/articleshow/104272327.cms- EMEA's unicorn hunters: 10 investors shaping growth during tough times https://techfundingnews.com/emeas-unicorn-hunters-10-investors-shaping-growth-during-tough-times/- Automaze https://www.producthunt.com/posts/automaze- ET Startup Awards 2023 | Funding winter more in the mind than in reality, says Piyush Goyal https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/startups/et-startup-awards-2023-funding-winter-more-in-the-mind-than-in-reality-says-piyush-goyal/articleshow/104244790.cms- ET Startup Awards 2023 | Strong vote of confidence a boost for startups Inc https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/startups/et-startup-awards-2023-strong-vote-of-confidence-a-boost-for-startups-inc/articleshow/104247081.cms- ET Startup Awards 2023 | Pedigree of India's tech ecosystem firmly established: Rajeev Chandrasekhar https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/startups/pedigree-of-indias-tech-ecosystem-firmly-established-rajeev-chandrasekhar/articleshow/104265882.cms- Regulating AI through shared, secure and sustainable approaches https://www.politico.eu/sponsored-content/regulating-ai-through-shared-secure-and-sustainable-approaches/?utm_source=RSS_Feed&utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication- ET Startup Awards 2023 | Indian startups go back to the basics in a changed world https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/startups/et-startup-awards-2023-chant-profitability-sustainability-with-us-panel-on-awards-night/articleshow/104265417.cms- The Weekly Notable Startup Funding Report: 10/9/23 https://www.alleywatch.com/2023/10/the-weekly-notable-startup-funding-report-10-9-23/- Women and underrepresented founders aren't going to wait for the VC industry to transform itself https://techcrunch.com/2023/10/08/how-women-and-underrepresented-founders-can-overcome-investor-bias-and-shift-the-funding-landscape-in-their-favor/- ET Startup Awards | Funding winter is only in mind, cash exists for good ventures: Piyush Goyal https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/startups/funding-winter-only-in-the-mind-no-shortage-of-funds-for-good-ideas-piyush-goyal/articleshow/104264039.cms- World Bank's IFC backs Indian insurtech startup Onsurity in $24M funding https://techcrunch.com/2023/10/08/onsurity-funding-world-bank-ifc/
MON: Riksbank Minutes, Bank of Israel Announcement, Chinese Inflation (Jun), Norwegian CPI (Jun), Chinese New, Yuan Loans (Jun)TUE: EIA STEOWED: BoC Announcement, RBNZ Announcement, German CPI Final (Jun), UK Jobs Data (May/Jun), German ZEW Survey (Jul), US CPI (Jun)THU: ECB Minutes, BoK Announcement, OPEC MOMR, IEA OMR, EU-Japan summit, UK GDP (May), US PPI final Demand (Jun)FRI: US University of Michigan Prelim. (Jul), German Wholesale PriceRead the full report covering Equities, Forex, Fixed Income, Commodites and more on Newsquawk
The EU and Japan's potential partnership on AI and chips to reduce reliance on China, the UN Security Council's first-ever meeting on the potential threats of AI to global peace and security, a paper challenging the belief that pre-trained models always outperform meta-learning algorithms in few-shot learning, and Microsoft's ZeRO++ introducing communication volume reduction techniques to improve the efficiency of training large language models. Contact: sergi@earkind.com Timestamps: 00:34 Introduction 01:42 EU and Japan look to partner on A.I. and chips as China ‘de-risking' strategy continues 02:58 UN council to hold first meeting on potential threats of artificial intelligence to global peace 04:53 June 2023, A Stage Review of Instruction Tuning 05:48 Fake sponsor 07:36 Is Pre-training Truly Better Than Meta-Learning? 09:37 ZeRO++: Extremely Efficient Collective Communication for Giant Model Training 11:26 Understanding Parameter Sharing in Transformers 13:46 Outro
Unsere Themen: EU-Japan-Rat für digitale Partnerschaft Gibt es bald keine Programmierer mehr? KI wird Thema im UN-Sicherheitsrat Shopping mit Bing Und Update für Runways Gen-2 https://www.heise.de/thema/Kuenstliche-Intelligenz https://the-decoder.de/ https://www.heiseplus.de/podcast
Photo: No known restrictions on publication. @Batchelorshow #UK:#EU: #Japan: #Switzerland: Dollar Supremacy at the eve of Winter Recession. Brett Arends, Marketwatch https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-09-16/rampant-dollar-has-room-to-run-as-fed-gears-up-for-more-hikes?srnd=premium-asia&sref=5g4GmFHo
Dr. Jagannath Panda is currently the head of Stockholm Centre for South Asian and Indo-Pacific Affairs at the Institute for Security & Development Policy in Sweden.
Miles Free and Carli Kistler-Miller discuss how the United States claims of national security is a farce and how the tariffs are putting our U.S. manufacturing companies in a bind.
Compliance Clarified – a podcast by Thomson Reuters Regulatory Intelligence
In this last episode of the current season of the Compliance Clarified podcast series, Susannah Hammond, Lindsey Rogerson and Rachel Wolcott discuss all things Brexit. Specifically, what the future interaction and relationship between the UK and the EU might look like and what that may mean for financial services firms and their compliance officers. The "Rachel" Lindsey refers to in this episode is Rachel Kent, Head of Financial Services Regulation at Hogan Lovells. Below are the links mentioned in the podcast together with an article by Rachel on EMIR Edwin Schooling Latter speech https://www.fca.org.uk/news/speeches/forward-look-regulation-uks-wholesale-financial-markets EMIR article FCA to consult on EMIR reporting later in 2021; industry wants more guidance now https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:6780859396474978304/ Landing page for EU/U.S. regulatory forum with minutes https://ec.europa.eu/info/publications/financial-services-regulation-regulatory-dialogues-usa_en Landing page for the EU/Japan regulatory forum with minutes https://ec.europa.eu/info/publications/financial-services-regulation-high-level-meetings-japan_en Further information on Thomson Reuters Regulatory Intelligence can be found herehttps://legal.thomsonreuters.com/en/products/regulatory-intelligence
EU STUNNED as UK & Japan reach LANDMARK, post-BREXIT trade deal. The Duran: Episode 669. Via CNBC (https://www.cnbc.com/2020/09/11/uk-and-japan-agree-on-principle-to-free-trade-deal.html)... The U.K. and Japan on Friday agreed in principle to a trade deal, in a move that sees the U.K. strike its first major agreement post-Brexit. The announcement, which the U.K. hailed as a “historic moment,” comes as Britain struggles to secure an agreement with its closest trading partners in the European Union. Britain's trade department said U.K. businesses would benefit from tariff-free trade on 99% of exports to Japan. It also suggested the deal would see the country increase trade with Japan by £15.2 billion ($19.5 billion). The deal will include digital and data provisions that go “far beyond” the EU-Japan deal, Britain claimed, enabling the “free flow of data whilst maintaining high standards of protection for personal data.” The tentative agreement, which will require the approval of both the U.K. and Japanese parliaments, is scheduled to come into the force at the end of the year. “This is a historic moment for the UK and Japan as our first major post-Brexit trade deal,” Liz Truss, U.K. international trade secretary, said in a statement. *** The Patriot Beacon #1 Tactical Flashlight on the Market Link: https://www.patrioticlegacy.com/product/patriot-flashlight/ Coupon code: Duran20
The race to inflate took a giant leap forward in the last couple of days with the European Union and Japan announcing massive monetary stimulus programs in the face of the worst recession in memory. It was less than a week ago that we saw the Bank of America release a report quantifying the global central bank monetisation at nearly $2.4 billion every hour for the last 2 months. This takes that to a whole new level.
E011: Dr. Douglas Lippoldt, Chief Trade Economist at HSBC Global Research in London, explains why the U.S. and EU are each other’s largest trade and investment partners despite never having negotiated a free trade agreement, what’s at stake as the two parties negotiate a limited trade deal, and why agriculture is a longstanding sticking point in U.S.-EU trade. He also explains what Americans and Europeans might misperceive about each other’s agricultural systems. Opinions expressed on Trade Matters are solely those of the guest or host and not the Yeutter Institute or the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Show Notes: Trade and American Leadership: The Paradoxes of Power and Wealth from Alexander Hamilton to Donald Trump by Craig VanGrasstek Lippoldt, D., “Labour markets trade up: International commerce delivers economy-wide benefits”, HSBC Insights, 4 October 2019 Lippoldt, D., “New trade deals deliver: early gains from Pacific Basin and EU-Japan accords”, HSBC Insights, 16 May 2019 OECD (2012), Policy Priorities for International Trade and Jobs, (ed.), D. Lippoldt, Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development Lippoldt, D. (2015), "Innovation and the Experience with Agricultural Patents Since 1990: Food for Thought", OECD Food, Agriculture and Fisheries Papers, No. 73, OECD Publishing, Paris
On December 10, 2019, Ifri held a conference on the New EU-Japan Partnership. The second panel discussed questions such as: - How to foster cooperation on connectivity issues (quality infrastructure, etc.)? - How can Japan and the EU work together on climate change and SDG objectives? - How to ensure greater coordination between the EU and Japan in international settings? Speakers: - Yukari TAKAMURA, Professor, Tokyo University - Axel BERKOFSKY, Professor, University of Pavia, Italy and Co-Head of ISPI Asia Center - Romana VLAHUTIN, Ambassador at Large for Connectivity, European External Action Service Chair: Céline PAJON, Research fellow, Center for Asian Studies, Ifri
On December 10, 2019?, Ifri held a conference on the New EU-Japan Partnership. The first panel discussed questions such as: - What are the strategic effects of the Japan-EU EPA in promoting free trade? - How to assess the concrete effects of the EPA on bilateral economic exchanges? - What is the impact of Brexit on bilateral EU-Japan economic relations? Speakers: - Yuka FUKUNAGA, Professor, Waseda University - Iana DREYER, Founder and Editor, Borderlex - Koichi INOUE, Deputy Director-General, JETRO Paris Chair: Françoise NICOLAS, Director, Center for Asian Studies Ifri
Maria (Mia) Åsenius talks about the highlights of her 5 years as the Head of Cabinet for Cecilia Malmström (EU Commissioner of Trade). She discusses the "Trade for All" initiative and how it helped to guide the negotiations of the bilateral agreements negotiated under their administration: EU - Singapore (re-visited and split into FTA an investment agreement), EU - Vietnam, EU - Japan, EU - Canada (CETA), and EU -MERCOSUR (concluded but not ratified). Maria discusses what goes into negotiating these agreements and why Commissioner Malmström has been so successful in doing so. Other topics include the WTO dispute settlement body, geographical indicators, and the future of EU trade. https://ec.europa.eu/commission/commissioners/2014-2019/malmstrom/team_en https://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2015/october/tradoc_153846.pdf Contact us: Email: womenintradepodcast@gmail.com Twitter: @Tradepodcast
This year’s EU-Japan conference, jointly organised by Bruegel and The Graduate Institute, Kobe University, will discuss Competition policy in the era of Artificial Intelligence. The conference will discuss the challenges brought by the economic impact of AI, with particular focus on the impact on competition as well as related policy challenges and ways to increase AI’s positive impact on the economy. We will also discuss the role of EU and Japan in the ongoing process of AI development. The focus on AI for this coming year is specifically relevant as Japan, like Europe as a whole, is at risk of being over-shadowed by the US and China. After the signature of the EU-Japan Partnership Agreement there is also much more scope and a strong ground for collaboration between the two regions.
This year’s EU-Japan conference, jointly organised by Bruegel and The Graduate Institute, Kobe University, will discuss Competition policy in the era of Artificial Intelligence. The conference will discuss the challenges brought by the economic impact of AI, with particular focus on the impact on competition as well as related policy challenges and ways to increase AI’s positive impact on the economy. We will also discuss the role of EU and Japan in the ongoing process of AI development. The focus on AI for this coming year is specifically relevant as Japan, like Europe as a whole, is at risk of being over-shadowed by the US and China. After the signature of the EU-Japan Partnership Agreement there is also much more scope and a strong ground for collaboration between the two regions.
**Amid the Asia-Europe Economic Forum on the fringes of the 12th ASEM Summit, Bruegel senior fellow hosts a conversation on developing global trade relations, with guests Moonsung Kang, professor as Korea University, and Michael G. Plummer, director at SAIS Europe – Johns Hopkins University, for an episode of the Bruegel Backstage series on ‘The Sound of Economics'.** With Bruegel hosting the two-day Asia-Europe Economic Forum in the same week as the Asia-Europe Meeting takes place in Brussels, André Sapir takes the opportunity to talk about the quickening changes to the global trade landscape in conversation with Moonsung Kang, professor as Korea University, and Michael G. Plummer, director at SAIS Europe – Johns Hopkins University. Led by President Donald Trump, the US has begun to challenge the multilateral trade system. Meanwhile, Europe has been busy securing free trade agreements – most recently with Japan, previously with Canada and others. With the US appearing to withdraw, and abdicate its leading role in the global trading system, Asia's moves to improve relations with Europe make sense; the EU seems to have better appreciated the shift of the gravitational centre of world trade towards Asia. The question remains how closely Asia and the EU will agree to cooperate in the years to come, and whether the US political narrative will develop in a way that leads them back towards free trade, or even further down the road of bilateral agreements. If you are interested in reading more on this topic, we can recommend the research paper on the [EU-Japan agreement](http://bruegel.org/2018/10/the-eu-japan-economic-partnership-agreement/) that Bruegel has submitted to the European Parliament, by André Sapir, Sonali Chowdhry and Alessio Terzi. Consider also the Bruegel Backstage podcast episode on the [developing EU-China relationship](http://bruegel.org/2018/09/backstage-developing-the-eu-china-relationship-amid-rising-global-trade-tensions/) in the face of rising global trade tensions.
**Bruegel senior fellow André Sapir welcomes Tamotsu Nakamura, dean of Kobe University's Graduate School of Economics, and Maria Åsenius, head of cabinet to European trade commissioner Cecilia Malmström, for a discussion of the EU-Japan economic partnership in the context of heightening global trade tensions.** The EU and Japan have signed a landmark trade deal this summer that will create the world's largest open economic area. The economic partnership agreement will be the biggest bilateral trade agreement the EU has ever signed, permitting not only the dropping of tariffs but also regulatory cooperation, as well as a special focus to promote the interests of SMEs. The trade-positive nature of this agreement goes against the grain of the numerous challenges made to the global multilateral system in recent times, best represented by the tariffs and counter-tariffs imposed by the US and China upon one another. To explore how this accord suits the EU and Japan, in terms of both the domestic and international interests of each side, Bruegel senior fellow André Sapir welcomes two guests for this edition of the Bruegel Backstage series – Tamotsu Nakamura, dean of Kobe University's Graduate School of Economics, and Maria Åsenius, head of cabinet to European trade commissioner Cecilia Malmström. If you are interested in reading more on this topic, we can recommend the research paper on the EU-Japan agreement that Bruegel has submitted to the European Parliament, by André Sapir, Sonali Chowdhry and Alessio Terzi. You might also consider our previous podcast on EU's options in the event of global trade war, featuring Bruegel director Guntram Wolff with Bernd Lange, member of the European Parliament and chair of the Committee on International Trade. Tamotsu Nakamura and Maria Åsenius participated in one session of the Bruegel conference on international trade and the EU-Japan agreement.
Session I - The Real Economic Impact of the EU-Japan EPA?
Session II - Global leaders in free trade- who are they today?
The treaty, signed on July 6, drops tariffs and soft barriers across an area of 600mn people worth a third of the global economy. It also reiterates the role of both parties as champions of global trade right at a time when protectionism is mounting around the globe. Podcast host Jacopo Dettoni speaks to Elitsa Garnizova, a researcher at the London School of Economics, about the treaty's impact on mutual trade and investment moving forward, and its implications for Japanese investment in the UK as Brexit's March 2019 deadline approaches. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
MONEY FM 89.3 - Prime Time with Howie Lim, Bernard Lim & Finance Presenter JP Ong
Ven Srinivasan discusses EU-Japan trade, WTO complaints and global debt with Michael Switow.
In this episode, we tackle Japan’s relationships with the European Union and Russia in tandem. How will BREXIT affect EU-Japan and Japan-UK relations? What does the new EU-Japan FTA deal mean for the Japanese economy? Will Japan ever regain control of the Northern Territories in the Kuril Islands? Why has Shinzo Abe sought to improve Japan’s relations with Vladimir Putin and Russia? How does Japan’s stance on these issues impact the United States and the international order? CSIS 2018 Strategic Japan Fellows and Keio University Professors Dr. Michito Tsuruoka and Dr. Yoko Hirose join the pod with CSIS Senior Vice President for Europe, Eurasia, and the Arctic Heather Conley to answer these questions and more. Hosted by Liza Keller. Audio edited by Ribka Gemilangsari. Written and produced by Jeffrey Bean. Read Dr. Tsuruoka’s summary essay on Japan-EU relations here and full 2018 Strategic Japan paper here. Read Dr. Hirose’s summary essay on Japan’s diplomacy with Russia over the Northern Territories here and full 2018 Strategic Japan paper here.
This week Christian Oliver, POLITICO Europe's trade editor, talks us through the astonishing speed with which the EU completed its trade deal with Japan, and why future trade deals will not be so easy. Marietje Schaake, a Dutch liberal member of the European Parliament and member of the 2017 POLITICO 28 list, tells us why she thinks a data flows chapter could still be added into the Japan trade deal, why she thinks protestors at the G20 summit have no excuse for their violence, and why she is so worried about the Trump administration. Schaake also has a message for Theresa May. Schaake thinks May is living in a fantasy land when it comes to post-Brexit trade deals: “Where's the sense of realism and what kind of narrative are you projecting out there and how are you ever going to meet it?” she told EU Confidential. Our Brussels brains trust, Lina Aburous and Ailbhe Finn, chew over whether it's OK for Ryanair and the European Commissioner for Transport Violeta Bulc to support special flight deals for Erasmus program exchange students. And in our Dear Politico section we hear from a listener who wants to know what she should tell her boss — a male member of the European Parliament — who asks her to babysit, for no payment, at the end of long parliament sitting days in Strasbourg. She has a PhD and her male colleagues are never asked to babysit, she says.
EU-Japan free trade pact signals a direct challenge to Donald Trump's policy of protectionism. The FT's Robin Harding and Daniel Dombey give their assessment of the significance of the deal to James Wilson. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this week's edition of World View Denis Staunton discusses the options for the UK's participation in the EU after the latest elections with Paddy Smyth and Paul Gillespie and Daithi O'Ceallaigh who have edited a new book on the subject called Britain and Europe: The Endgame - An Irish Perspective. Later Denis hears about the plans for an arms fair in Japan and its broader implications with David McNeill in Tokyo. World View is a weekly foreign affairs podcast. It is produced by Sinead O'Shea and presented by Denis Staunton.