Acting
US envoy urges Korea to resolve trade imbalance, nontariff barriers
Interim ambassador
calls for more direct investments from Korean firms
By Park Jae-hyuk, The
Korea Times - A top U.S. diplomat said Korea needs to take "appropriate
actions" in response to the Donald Trump administration's intensifying
pressure to reduce its trade surplus with the U.S. and eliminate nontariff
barriers.
U.S. Charge d'Affaires
Joseph Yun made the remarks, Tuesday, saying there will be huge concentration
in Washington on trade imbalance issues, with the changes going on in his
country's tariff policy.
"The trade deficit
has increased more than double from Trump 1.0 to Trump 2.0," the Korean
American diplomat said during a luncheon meeting hosted by the American Chamber
of Commerce in Korea (AMCHAM). "That is troubling to the new administration
in Washington."
His remarks were in
line with what U.S. National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett said in a
interview on Monday (local time). The senior White House official mentioned
Korea as one of the regions with which his country has suffered an increasing trade
deficit, along with Europe and China.
Just like Hassett, who
cited nontariff barriers as the main reason behind the trade imbalance, Yun
also urged Korea to get rid of restrictions that limit the import of goods in
which the U.S. is competitive.
Recalling massive
rallies against U.S. beef imports he witnessed in 2008 in front of the U.S.
Embassy in Seoul, the interim ambassador picked agriculture as one of the
sectors blocked by Korea's nontariff barriers, along with digital technologies,
services and resources.
Earlier this month, it
was revealed that a U.S. cattlemen's association proposed in Washington that
Korea should start importing their beef regardless of the age of the cows.
Their proposal was apparently targeting the Korean government's ban on importing
U.S. beef from cattle aged 30 months or older, a ban imposed when fears of mad
cow disease were high in Korea.
The charge d'affaires
emphasized that proactive measures from the Korean government could alleviate
impacts from reciprocal tariffs that the White House seeks to announce on April
2.
He advised Seoul to
ramp up efforts to negotiate with Washington for a better result.
"I don't think
they've made a full decision how reciprocal tariffs are calculated. They will
take into account factors such as nontariff barrier and other access
issues," Yun said.
He also encouraged
Korean companies to increase direct investments in his country, if they want to
get credit from Trump.
"I would say that
direct investments by big companies, as well as small ones, matter a lot,"
he said. "During the first Trump administration, Lotte's petrochemical
investment in Texas and Louisiana areas got huge attention from the president."
Yun added that the
forthcoming opening of Hyundai Motor's Georgia plant and a major purchase
agreement between Boeing and Korean Air next week will also gain attention.
During the luncheon,
the acting ambassador expressed optimism about the success of the APEC summit
to be held later this year in Gyeongju, North Gyeongsang Province, saying that
Korea will resolve the leadership vacuum in its government by then.
Last week, he expressed
confidence in Trump's participation in the APEC summit, and said he expects him
to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping at the international event.
Source: https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/tech/2025/03/419_394433.html?na