Key Points

South Korea is launching a major support program for its steel industry facing steep US tariffs. Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan announced a 400 billion won export guarantee scheme during meetings with steel executives including POSCO. The US had doubled steel tariffs to 50% in June, causing South Korean exports to plummet by over 25% in July. The government will continue negotiating with Washington for tariff relief while implementing additional support measures for affected steel companies.

Key Points: South Korea Launches $290M Steel Export Guarantee After US Tariffs

  • South Korea launches 400 billion won export guarantee program for steel industry
  • US doubled steel tariffs to 50% under Trump administration in June
  • Exports to US fell over 25% year-on-year in July due to tariffs
  • Bank of Korea estimates US tariffs will cut growth by 0.45 percentage points
2 min read

S. Korea to launch export guarantee programme for steelmakers hit by US tariffs

South Korea introduces 400 billion won export guarantee program for steelmakers hit by US tariffs, with Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan announcing support measures.

"The government, steelmakers, financial institutions and policy lenders will work together to create a guaranteed scheme - Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan"

Seoul, Sep 19

Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan said on Friday the government will introduce a new export guarantee program worth around 400 billion won ($290 million) for the steel industry faced with steep tariffs from the United States.

Kim made the remarks during a meeting with top executives of major steel companies, including POSCO, in the southeastern city of Pohang.

The U.S. administration of President Donald Trump had imposed 25 percent tariffs on steel and aluminum imports before doubling the rate to 50 percent in June, reports Yonhap news agency.

"The government, steelmakers, financial institutions and policy lenders will work together to create a guaranteed scheme to strengthen the steel industry's supply chains," Kim said, noting that the measure will create an economic effect equivalent to about 400 billion won in support.

The minister also pledged to continue holding talks with Washington for tariff relief while vowing to roll out follow-up support measures for the industry and step up efforts to block unfair imports.

The government will also seek to ease regional economic strains triggered by the steel sector's difficulties while working with the National Assembly on legislation to bolster the industry, Kim added.

Washington's aggressive tariff scheme has hurt domestic steelmakers, with exports tumbling more than 25 percent on-year in July.

Meanwhile, the United States' trade policy is estimated to lower South Korea's economic growth rate by 0.45 percentage point this year, the central bank said.

After months-long negotiations, Seoul and Washington reached a crucial agreement in late July, under which the U.S. imposes a 15 percent tariff on South Korea, down from the initially planned 25 percent, in exchange for an investment pledge of US$350 billion in the U.S.

"The impact of the U.S.' tariff policies was limited in the first half on the back of U.S. companies' inventory accumulation, pre-exports to the U.S. by other countries and shared burdens by businesses. But the effects are expected to become more visible going forward," the Bank of Korea (BOK) said its latest biannual monetary policy report.

—IANS

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Good move by South Korea! When big economies impose unfair tariffs, governments must step in to protect local industries. Hope our Indian government takes notes for our manufacturing sector.
M
Michael C
While I understand the need to protect domestic industries, these protectionist policies hurt global trade. Countries should work through WTO rather than unilateral tariffs that disrupt supply chains.
A
Ananya R
$290 million support package seems substantial but will it be enough? Steel industry employs thousands and such drastic tariff hikes can have ripple effects on entire economies. Hope both countries find middle ground.
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Suresh O
This is why Atmanirbhar Bharat is so important! We need to build self-reliance in critical sectors like steel so we're not at the mercy of other countries' trade policies. Jai Hind! 🚩
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Nisha Z
Interesting to see how different countries handle trade wars. South Korea's approach of government-industry collaboration is something we could learn from. Protectionism is becoming the new normal unfortunately.

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