Home GRASP GRASP/Korea U. S. Sees `Much Work' to Revising South Korea Free-Trade Pact

U. S. Sees `Much Work' to Revising South Korea Free-Trade Pact

290
0
SHARE

Officials from the U. S. and South Korea said further talks were needed to revise their free-trade pact, a negotiation straining ties between the…
Officials from the U. S. and South Korea said further talks were needed to revise their free-trade pact, a negotiation straining ties between the allies as they grapple with Kim Jong Un’s growing nuclear-weapons threat.
The U. S. presented proposals to improve auto exports and lift trade barriers during a meeting with South Korea counterparts Friday in Washington, Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said in a statement. While both sides agreed to hold more talks soon, South Korea’s top negotiator, Yoo Myung-hee, said afterward that “the negotiation is not easy,” according to Yonhap News.
“We have much work to do to reach an agreement that serves the economic interests of the American people,” Lighthizer said. “We must achieve fair and reciprocal trade between our two nations.”
U. S. President Donald Trump, who has abandoned or reopened trade talks with numerous nations since taking office last year, has blamed the five-year-old pact known as Korus for doubling America’s trade deficit with South Korea. He has pressed ahead with efforts to revise the deal, even while seeking solidarity from President Moon Jae-in against North Korea’s nuclear provocations.
The talks Friday represented the first round of Korus negotiations since the U. S. in July invoked a clause in the accord that enables either side to seek amendments. South Korea “responded actively” to the U. S. while proposing its own changes to investor-state dispute settlement rules and trade remedies, the country’s trade ministry said in a statement, without giving details.

Continue reading...