Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will meet with President Trump Friday in Washington, D.C., and a possible trade deal is near the top of their agenda.
Japan and the U.S. thought they had such a deal already, as part of the broader Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) negotiations.  But Trump withdrew from the TPP before it could come into force.
The question now is whether Japan and the U.S. can salvage the hard negotiating they did as part of the TPP and work out a bilateral replacement.



With all the economic nationalist rhetoric coming from Trump and some of his advisers, new trade negotiations might seem unlikely at this point. How can the U.S. manage to free up trade in an atmosphere in which foreign companies and governments are constantly bashed as cheaters?
But if you parse the statements coming from the Trump folks carefully, what you find is criticism of many existing trade arrangements but positive statements about bilateral trade deals that are done properly.