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Japan seeks farm export gains to blunt pain from weak yen

REUTERS

TOKYO — When Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida vowed to wring more gains from the weak yen, which has become instead a source of economic pain, he was pinning his hopes on the likes of Soichi Yoshimura, 33, and his strawberry farm north of Tokyo.

Most Japanese farmers — like many other key players in the economy — are up in arms about the yen’s 20% slide this year, which has inflated costs for imported fuel, fertilizer and other production inputs.

But prospects are different for Japan’s exporters of wagyu beef, green tea, and premium fruits and vegetables, including the “Sky Berries” from Yoshimura’s greenhouses that can fetch as much as ¥800 ($5.50) or more apiece in the supermarkets of Hong Kong, Bangkok and Singapore.

“Everyone seems worried about a weak yen,” Yoshimura said. “But it’s good for our exports of strawberries because it helps make our prices competitive at overseas markets.”

Agriculture exports were among a clutch of sectors that Mr. Kishida targeted in a policy speech on Monday — along with tourism and the construction of foreign chip and battery plants in Japan — that could get a boost from the yen’s steep fall, and offset some of the economic damage it has caused.

“We need to maximize earning power now that the weak yen raises the potential of exports,” Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno, Mr. Kishida’s second-in-command, told a government meeting.

Mr. Matsuno instructed ministers to bring forward the government’s target of nearly doubling agricultural exports to ¥2 trillion annually by 2025, and urged government ministries to find ways of leveraging the weak yen to boost farmers’ earning power.

The government aims to boost farm exports further to ¥5 trillion by 2030, and Mr. Kishida also set a ¥5-trillion target for annual revenue from tourism, which is expected to rebound after COVID-related border restrictions are lifted on Oct. 11.

That would still be relatively modest compared with last year’s ¥83 trillion in overall exports and roughly ¥550-trillion GDP, but marks steady progress for agricultural exports, which totalled just ¥450 billion in 2012.

This is not Japan’s first go at this sort of structural realignment, to diversify its manufacturing-dominated economy and revive its stagnant rural areas.

Similar efforts have emerged from Japanese policymakers since the early 2000s, including proposed reforms by former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s government in the last decade.

But the yen’s steep drop this year to a 24-year low, triggering a surge in import-driven cost-push inflation that severely threatens both Japan’s economic growth and Mr. Kishida’s popularity, has given new impetus to the campaign.

In southern Japan’s Miyazaki prefecture, the local government is offering $5,200 subsidies to farmers developing new farm products for export and setting up new facilities exclusively for use in exports.

Not far away in rural Saga prefecture, nestled between the cities of Nagasaki and Fukuoka, the prefectural government is building a new wagyu processing plant to gear up for export of “Saga beef,” a leading domestic brand, to European markets.

And in Gunma prefecture, north of Tokyo, about 40 small firms have begun exporting farm products since 2018 under the auspices of the Japan External Trade Organization, a semi-governmental export promotion entity that has provided expertise on brand development, export pricing and other export-related operations.

But export-oriented farmers in Japan say the sector will need more investment to increase productivity and produce higher-value goods, especially since the weak yen has become a double-edged sword that also boosts costs.

“The cost of fertilizers and shipping materials have risen a lot,” said Hideyuki Otsuki, 65, a peach farmer in Fukushima prefecture north of Tokyo, who exports his produce to Thailand, Singapore, Indonesia and Hong Kong.

“It’s true the weak yen helps food exports. To maximize the positive impact, we must add more value to farm goods and boost output so that more of us make ends meet.” — Reuters

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