US-South Korea Trade Talks End Without Deal, Tariff Hike Threat Looms

The first day of talks between South Korean Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan and US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick concluded without an agreement on preventing threatened tariff increases. The negotiations follow President Trump's surprise announcement to raise "reciprocal" tariffs on South Korean autos, lumber, and pharmaceuticals from 15% to 25%. Kim stated that discussions were extensive and that both sides agreed to meet again the following morning, but no conclusion was reached. The tension stems from US criticism of delays in Seoul's legislative procedures to implement a bilateral trade deal under which South Korea pledged a $350 billion investment in the United States.

Key Points: US-South Korea Trade Talks End Without Tariff Agreement

  • Day 1 talks end without agreement
  • Trump threatened 25% tariffs on key imports
  • South Korea pledged $350 billion US investment
  • Focus on delayed trade deal implementation
  • Negotiators to meet again next day
2 min read

Talks between S. Korea, US end without tariff agreement on Day 1

First-day talks between US and South Korean officials conclude without a deal to prevent threatened tariff increases. Negotiators agree to meet again.

"We had extensive talks and agreed to meet again tomorrow morning. - Kim Jung-kwan"

Washington, Jan 30

Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan said that he and US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick concluded the first day of their talks over renewed tariff tension between the two countries without an agreement but they agreed to meet again the next day.

Kim and Lutnick held the meeting in Washington, three days after Trump threatened to increase reciprocal tariffs and auto, lumber and pharmaceutical duties on South Korea to 25 per cent from 15 per cent, citing a delay in Seoul's legislative procedures supporting the implementation of the trade deal, reports Yonhap news agency.

"We had extensive talks and agreed to meet again tomorrow morning," Kim told reporters after the meeting. "We have not yet reached a conclusion," he added.

Asked if he succeeded in preventing the Trump administration from raising tariffs on South Korea, he said, "(We were) not at the point of saying whether it was prevented or not prevented."

He was expected to stress Seoul's commitment to fulfilling its investment pledge under a bilateral trade deal that was first struck in late July and finalised months later.

Under the deal, South Korea has committed to investing US$350 billion in the United States, among other pledges, in return for the U.S.' lowering of reciprocal tariffs on South Korea.

During his stay in Washington, Kim also plans to meet other senior Trump administration officials, including Energy Secretary Chris Wright.

US President Donald Trump earlier said that his administration will work "something" out with South Korea after he threatened earlier this week to raise "reciprocal" tariffs and other levies on the Asian ally.

"We will work something out with South Korea," he said during a press availability at the White House, responding to a question about whether he would increase tariffs on Korea.

On Monday, Trump made the surprise announcement of a plan to increase "reciprocal" tariffs and auto, lumber and pharmaceutical duties on South Korea to 25 percent from 15 percent, taking issue with a delay in Seoul's legislative procedures supporting the implementation of the trade deal.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
$350 billion investment pledge? That's a huge amount. Makes me wonder about the pressure small countries face in deals with superpowers. Hope India negotiates our trade deals very carefully.
D
David E
Interesting to see this play out. The "reciprocal" tariff logic is becoming a common tool. While I understand the US perspective, such sudden announcements create immense uncertainty for global businesses.
A
Ananya R
The article mentions legislative delays in Seoul. Sometimes our own parliament also gets stuck in similar delays on important bills. It can hurt our international standing. We need more efficiency. 🤔
V
Vikram M
Auto and pharma sectors are mentioned. These are crucial for India too. Any global tariff war impacts our exports. Hope our commerce ministry is watching this closely and has contingency plans.
S
Sarah B
"We will work something out" – sounds very non-committal. It must be stressful for the South Korean negotiators. Trade talks require clarity and trust, not last-minute surprises.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50