Congress and the Reagan Administration still have a long way to go before they agree on a new trade
America suffers a trade deficit with Japan because the American public willingly buys foreign products.
Everybody seems to be worrying about the takeover of the United States by the Japanese.
Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone's recent visit was reminiscent of the Japanese emissaries professing their peaceful intentions just prior to the infamous attack on Pearl Harbor, Dec. 7, 1941.
Imposing trade barriers will end up hurting the U.S. economy overall.
Trade Plumbing has been a web based pipes and warming retailer since 2006,But the family has been
It is a pity that the U.S. government must now bring pressure on Japan to buy more of our products.
Fellow Americans! Let's not be such crybabies! Stop blaming the Japanese for our trade deficits.
Conrad's cartoon (March 31) depicting Japan's one-way trade was captioned, "Hirohito's Revenge."
The Japan External Trade Organization, known as JETRO, has moved its Los Angeles office to 725 S.
The Soviet Union and the West today blamed one another for the impasse in talks to reduce NATO and Warsaw Pact troops in Europe as the negotiations broke for the summer.
Virtually everyone has agreed that Nicholas Daniloff was arrested and detained in order to secure the release of the Russian spy Gennady Zakharov.
The "no-negotiation" policy that our government officials so ardently and vocally proclaim has caused the release of "non-spy" Daniloff after a month's confinement in Russia, and the public celebrates the happening with the usual media hype and attendant "red-carpet" ceremonies.
Much credit has been handed to Secretary Shultz for ending the Daniloff-Zakharov standoff.
It seems the United States is becoming a financial colony of Japan.
Your editorial, although pointed in the right direction, did not go far enough.
Jack Margolin (Letters, Aug. 30) referred to economics as "the dismal science" when he offered a criticism of U.S.
Japan's overall trade surplus swelled to a record $8.92 billion in September, one year after the
recent "trade retaliation" against the Japanese. $300 million against the $56-billion unfair trade
Bob Samuelson's article "Time Out in the Chip War," (Editorial Pages, April 8) was quite interesting.