Key Points

South Korean President Lee Jae Myung has successfully negotiated a landmark trade deal with the United States, significantly reducing tariffs from 25% to 15%. The agreement includes a massive $350 billion investment commitment from South Korea in key US sectors like shipbuilding and energy. Lee emphasized the deal's importance in eliminating export uncertainty and creating competitive conditions for South Korean businesses. The president also urged government ministries to closely monitor public concerns and prepare follow-up measures to protect national interests.

Key Points: Lee Jae Myung Secures Landmark Korea-US Trade Deal

  • Lee secures reduced 15% tariffs instead of initial 25% rate
  • $350 billion Korean investment pledge in US sectors
  • Avoided sensitive market access demands for beef and rice
  • Aims to bolster economic cooperation and export competitiveness
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President Lee urges follow-up measures for South Korea-US trade deal

South Korean President Lee negotiates critical trade agreement with US, reducing tariffs and securing $350B investment pledge

"We have overcome a significant hurdle - President Lee Jae Myung"

Seoul, July 31

South Korean President Lee Jae Myung urged the government on Thursday to closely monitor public concerns over the trade deal with the United States (US) and prepare follow-up measures to protect the nation's core interests.

Lee made the call after Seoul clinched a trade deal with Washington to lower the reciprocal and auto-specific tariffs from the initial 25 per cent to 15 per cent in exchange for the $350 billion investment pledge and $100 billion US energy purchases, Yonhap News Agency reported.

"It is expected to further bolster South Korea-US economic cooperation and the alliance," Lee said during a meeting with senior aides and secretaries.

"Although we have overcome a big mountain, the reorganisation of the global trade order is expected to accelerate."

With the deal concluded, Lee urged the government to address structural challenges facing the domestic economy by implementing measures to boost consumption and diversify export markets.

"I want relevant ministries to closely monitor public concerns and thoroughly prepare follow-up measures to safeguard our core national interests," he said.

South Korea avoided additional US market access demands in such sensitive sectors as beef and rice, Seoul officials said, but the new tariffs, set to take effect on Friday, have raised concerns over the export-reliant economy amid sagging domestic demand.

Earlier in the day, the two nations announced a bilateral trade agreement that sets a 15 per cent tariff on South Korean exports to the US against the initially expected 25 per cent, and includes a pledge for $350 billion in South Korean investment in the US shipbuilding, energy and other sectors.

The deal also applied the 15 per cent tariffs on automobiles, down from the current 25 per cent, while South Korea avoided additional US market access demands in such sensitive sectors as beef and rice. The new arrangement is set to take effect Friday (US time).

"We have overcome a significant hurdle," President Lee Jae Myung said in his Facebook post. "The agreement eliminates uncertainty in our export environment and creates conditions to compete on equal or better terms with major countries."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Interesting how they protected their sensitive sectors like beef and rice. India must be equally firm in trade negotiations to safeguard our agricultural interests. Jai Kisan! 👩‍🌾
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Arjun K
$350 billion investment pledge is huge! But I hope South Korea monitors where this money actually goes. We've seen in India how big investment promises sometimes don't materialize on ground.
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Sarah B
As someone working in international trade, I appreciate how South Korea balanced concessions with protections. India should study this model for our own FTA negotiations - especially the auto tariff reduction strategy.
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Karthik V
Good move by President Lee, but reducing tariffs always has two sides. Hope they have proper safeguards for domestic manufacturers. We've seen in India how sudden trade policy changes can hurt local businesses.
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Nisha Z
The energy purchase commitment is interesting - with India focusing on renewable energy, maybe we can explore similar deals that help both our energy security and manufacturing sectors. Solar panels anyone? ☀️

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