How an executive's arrest struck a blow to Japan-China business
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[November 14, 2023] By
Yukiko Toyoda, Kiyoshi Takenaka and Laurie Chen
TOKYO/BEIJING (Reuters) -If Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida meets
Chinese President Xi Jinping for the first time in a year later this
week, he will likely raise the case of a detained company executive that
has dealt an outsized blow to their close economic ties.
The employee of drugmaker Astellas Pharma, as well as other Japanese
imprisoned or under criminal probes in China, would probably be among
the topics to be discussed as plans take shape for the leaders to talk
on the sidelines of the APEC summit in San Francisco, sources familiar
with the planning said.
The arrest of the well-connected veteran of the Japanese community in
China has had what some Tokyo officials described as a considerable
chilling effect on business, contributing to a drop in foreign
investment to its lowest level since at least 2014 and accelerating an
exodus of expats.
"I know Japanese businesses are rethinking," Rahm Emanuel, the U.S.
ambassador to Japan, told Reuters in an interview. "Right now, you can't
get people to go staff the companies in China because they're scared of
their own safety."
China detained the executive, named in several media reports as Hiroshi
Nishiyama, on suspicion of espionage in March, and he was formally
arrested last month. Japan's then foreign minister protested the
executive's detention with his Chinese counterpart on a visit to Beijing
in April.
There has been no official confirmation that Kishida and Xi will hold a
meeting, which some Japanese news outlets have said is being prepared
for Thursday.
A spokesperson for Japan's foreign ministry said in an emailed statement
that Tokyo had repeatedly urged Beijing at various levels to repatriate
Japanese nationals detained in China and to ensure transparency in the
judicial process.
"Although nothing has been decided on future Japan-China bilateral
summit meetings, including on the occasion of the APEC summit meeting to
be held this week, we will continue to urge the Chinese side to do so,"
Masashi Mizobuchi, assistant press secretary at the ministry, said.
China's foreign ministry said in a statement: "China has always
supported China-Japan trade and economic cooperation, and provides a
good environment for the lawful operation of Japanese companies in China
and their employees."
RISKY BUSINESS
Five Japanese nationals are currently detained in China with a total of
17 detained since 2015, the year after China's anti-espionage law went
into effect, according to Japan's foreign ministry.
But the arrest of Nishiyama hit a nerve partly because of the timing -
coming during a sweeping national security crackdown and because of the
executive's high profile.
Nishiyama, a fluent Mandarin speaker and former board member of the
Japanese Chamber of Commerce in China, attended several high-profile
events with officials from both countries in recent years.
He often spoke about his connections to officialdom, two people who knew
him said on condition of anonymity.
Because of Nishiyama's status, his arrest had symbolic importance,
according to five Japanese government officials, who also spoke on
condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the case.
[to top of second column] |
Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida meets Chinese President Xi
Jinping on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation
(APEC) Summit in Bangkok, Thailand November 17, 2022, in this photo
released by Kyodo. Mandatory credit Kyodo via REUTERS
The officials said that since his detention there has been a sharp
uptick in questions from business people asking if it is safe to
travel to China, while some Japanese companies in China have been
telling employees to keep a low profile and not push too hard in
sales and other activities.
"People are worried that they may be arrested suddenly when they go
to China," Takeshi Niinami, chairman of the Japan Association of
Corporate Executives, told a news conference last month.
"Considering the current situation in China, it is very difficult to
create an atmosphere that encourages people to do something new,"
said Niinami, who is also the CEO of drinks giant Suntory.
DIFFICULT DECISIONS
In the first nine months of this year, Japan's net foreign direct
investment (FDI) into mainland China slumped 30.6% on the year to
393.4 billion yen ($2.6 billion), even as its total worldwide FDI
grew by nearly a fifth, according to ministry of finance data.
That is the lowest amount for the period going back to at least 2014
when the data series begins.
Half the respondents in a recent survey of Japanese companies doing
business in China said they would cut investments this year. Only
10% of the 8,300 firms said they would increase investments,
according to the inaugural poll by the Japanese Chamber of Commerce
in China published last month.
The reasons for caution given by respondents included sluggish
demand, cross border regulation and "concerns about the risk of
investment in China at head office".
Alongside the U.S., China is Japan's biggest trade partner, and a
major unwind of that relationship is not on the immediate horizon,
economists say.
But finding Japanese to staff offices in China could become more of
a problem for Japanese firms.
The number of Japanese living in China has been on a steady decline
over the last decade and totalled 102,066 in 2022, according to data
collected by Japan's foreign ministry. A similar drop this year
would mark the lowest number of expats there since at least 2004.
A real estate agent in Beijing, speaking on condition of anonymity,
said the Astellas case had a "huge impact" on his Japanese clients
with people refusing assignments in China or their families opposing
the moves because they are "scared" about getting in legal trouble.
Stefan Angrick, a senior economist for Moody's Analytics based in
Tokyo, said even some of the most pro-China business executives in
Japan are now wary of security risks there.
"Japan and China are two economies that are deeply intertwined with
one another and are incredibly important for one another. It's a
very difficult point in time to be navigating that as a decision
maker, in business or politics," he said.
($1 = 151.7200 yen)
(Reporting by Yukiko Toyoda, Kiyoshi Takenaka, John Geddie, Sakura
Murakami and Francis Tang in Tokyo; Laurie Chen and Antoni
Slodkowski in Beijing; and Andrew Silver in Shanghai; Writing by
John Geddie; Editing by Lincoln Feast and Alexander Smith)
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