Tokyo, July 10, 2025 — Japan is grappling with a politically charged trade dispute as U.S. President Donald Trump intensifies pressure on Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba to increase imports of American rice, threatening sweeping tariffs that could destabilize Japan’s fragile economy and government.
In a series of posts on Truth Social, Trump accused Japan of refusing to buy U.S. rice despite facing a domestic shortage. “They won’t take our RICE, and yet they have a massive rice shortage,” he wrote, warning of a 25% tariff on Japanese exports if Tokyo fails to comply.
The ultimatum comes just weeks before Japan’s upper house elections, where Ishiba’s ruling coalition risks further losses following a disastrous lower house defeat last October. Analysts say the rice issue could become a flashpoint, with Ishiba caught between appeasing Washington and protecting Japan’s powerful agricultural lobby.
Rice holds deep cultural and political significance in Japan, where nearly all consumed rice is domestically grown. Imports are viewed as a threat to food security and national pride. “If we become reliant on rice imports, we may face shortages again when something happens,” said Shinichi Katayama, a fourth-generation Tokyo rice wholesaler.
Despite Trump’s claims, Japan has already imported over $100 million in American rice this year, though many consumers reject foreign varieties as inferior. “American rice tastes awful. It lacks stickiness,” said Sueo Matsumoto, a Tokyo resident.
Ishiba’s government has tapped emergency stockpiles to combat soaring rice prices, which have doubled over the past year due to extreme weather, panic-buying, and hoarding. Still, officials remain firm. “We have no intention of sacrificing agriculture in future negotiations,” said Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi.
With the tariff pause expiring on July 9 and no deal in sight, Japan faces a precarious balancing act. A concession on rice could ease auto tariffs, but risks alienating rural voters and triggering political fallout. As one Tokyo retiree put it, “All these problems with rice prices show the LDP’s agriculture policy has failed”.
The outcome of this trade standoff may not only reshape Japan’s economic landscape but also determine the fate of its prime minister.


