
-
Indie game studios battle for piece of Switch 2 success
-
Former Liverpool and Man Utd star Ince banned for drink-driving
-
Spain taming fire that belched smoke cloud over Madrid
-
Top Holy Land clerics visit Gaza after deadly church strike
-
Scotland end tour with seven-try thrashing of Samoa
-
Sharaa's pullout from Syria Druze heartland exposes shaky leadership
-
Trump team to seek release of Epstein documents
-
Wrexham chief wants playoff push after promotion to Championship
-
Snoop Dogg becomes co-owner of Championship club Swansea
-
Pakistan bans new hotel construction around tourist lakes
-
Trump's budget hacksaw leaves public broadcasting on precipice
-
New deep sea mining rules lack consensus despite US pressure
-
Stocks head for positive end to week, Tokyo struggles ahead of vote
-
North Korea bars foreign tourists from new seaside resort
-
Lions ignoring the noise ahead of Wallabies Test
-
CBS says Stephen Colbert's 'The Late Show' to end in May 2026
-
Lions block Wallabies flanker Samu from Pasifika team
-
Indian state blames cricket team for deadly stampede
-
Trump threatens to sue WSJ, Murdoch over story on alleged 2003 letter to Epstein
-
Serbian youth pumps up protest at last EXIT festival
-
US Congress approves $9 bn in Trump cuts to foreign aid, public media
-
Misbehaving monks: Sex scandal shakes Thai Buddhist faithful
-
Injury rules All Blacks wing Ioane out of third France Test
-
China mulls economy-boosting measures to counter 'severe situation'
-
Wallabies skipper Wilson concedes losing Valetini a massive blow
-
Asian markets on course to end week on a positive note
-
UK 'princes in the tower' murder probe clears Richard III
-
From Antarctica to Brussels, hunting climate clues in old ice
-
Springboks pick dynamic half-backs for final Championship warm-up
-
Jorge Martin returns to MotoGP racing at revamped Brno
-
Olympic champion Lyles to make 100m season debut at London Diamond League
-
Japan's SMEs ready to adapt to Trump tariffs
-
South Korea to end private adoptions after landmark probe
-
California to sue Trump govt over axed high-speed rail funds
-
Brazil's Lula calls Trump's tariff threat 'unacceptable blackmail'
-
In rural Canadian town, new risk of measles deepens vaccine tensions
-
What to know about Trump's effort to oust Fed Chair Powell
-
Trump threatens to sue WSJ over story on alleged 2003 letter to Epstein
-
Gulf Air orders 12 Boeing 787 Dreamliners
-
Japan rice prices double, raising pressure on PM
-
'A trap' - Asylum seekers arrested after attending US courts
-
England's Wiegman hails 'one of a kind' Bronze after Euros shootout triumph
-
El Salvador rights group says forced out by Bukele 'repression'
-
US may revise hormone replacement therapy warnings
-
US House passes landmark crypto measures in win for Trump
-
Trump diagnosed with vein issue after leg swelling and hand bruising
-
England reach Euro 2025 semis after shootout win over Sweden
-
Netflix profits surge off ads, higher subscription prices
-
US stocks end at fresh records as markets shrug off tariff worries
-
British Open round 1: Who said what

Japan's SMEs ready to adapt to Trump tariffs
Small and medium-sized firms like Mitsuwa Electric that form the backbone of Japan's economy have weathered many storms over the decades, and company president Yuji Miyazaki is hopeful they will also withstand Donald Trump.
As part of a campaign against friend and foe, the US president has threatened 25 percent tariffs on imports of Japanese goods from August 1, having already imposed tough levies on its vehicles, steel and aluminium.
However, Miyazaki told AFP that he was confident.
"We are providing very specialised products for specialised industries, where it is difficult to change suppliers or supplying countries just because of boosted tariffs," he said on a tour of the 92-year-old firm.
"I'm not worried too much, because if American companies can't produce parts on their own, they have no choice but to import those parts regardless of tariffs," the descendant of the firm's founder said.
With 100 employees, Mitsuwa Electric is not a household name.
But like millions of other SMEs that account for 99.7 percent of Japan's companies, it is world-class in its specialist niche.
It began making light bulb filaments and now produces coils, rods, needles, plates, pipes and wires for a range of goods including car lights, photocopiers and X-ray machines.
In 2022 it won a Guinness World Record for the smallest commercially available metal coil, with a diameter around half that of a human hair.
Mitsuwa's customers are across Asia, Europe and North America and include Japanese engineering giant Toshiba and Toyota-affiliated parts maker Koito Manufacturing.
Miyazaki said the impact of US tariffs on the company's business is limited so far, with one auto sector customer asking it to lower prices.
"All we can do is to adapt to any changes in the business environment," Miyazaki said.
- Diversify to survive -
Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba has sent his tariffs envoy Ryosei Akazawa to Washington seven times since April to try to win relief from the tariffs.
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent was due to meet Ishiba and Akazawa on Friday in Tokyo.
But the prime minister's apparently maximalist strategy of insisting all tariffs are cut to zero have been criticised in some parts, especially as August 1 approaches.
US-bound exports of Japanese vehicles -- a sector tied to eight percent of Japanese jobs -- tumbled around 25 percent in May and June.
The lack of a deal isn't helping Ishiba's popularity ahead of upper house elections on Sunday that may end Ishiba's premiership after less than a year.
What bothers Japanese firms is Trump's unpredictability and the complexity of the tariffs, according to government-backed SME support organisation JETRO.
Since February, the group has received more than 2,000 enquiries from members about US tariffs, with a flood of requests since June asking for "the latest information" as the deadline approaches.
Mitsuwa Electric boss Miyazaki admits worrying about Trump's threat of pharmaceuticals tariffs of 200 percent, or if medical equipment is targeted.
Together with its broad product range, the diversification of its customer base has shielded it so far, he said.
This is also vital for other firms to survive, said Zenkai Inoue, an SME expert and professor at the Kyushu Institute of Information Sciences.
"I'm proposing a 'tricycle strategy', which means you have to have (at least) three customers in different regions," he told AFP.
"For SMEs, securing financial stability by asking banks for their funding is important to survive for the time being, then the next step would be expanding their sales channels to other markets," he said.
Inoue added that some Japanese firms had been slow to prepare for Trump's tariffs, even after he said he would during his 2024 election campaign.
"There was a time when Japanese companies, having heavily relied on the Chinese market, (were) hurt badly by a sudden change in China's policy. But some of them have not learnt a lesson enough from that experience," he said.
Q.Jaber--SF-PST