South Korea requests to be excluded from Trump's efforts to increase
tariffs
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[February 21, 2025] By
KIM TONG-HYUNG
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korean officials have asked the Trump
administration to exclude their country from U.S. plans to impose
aggressive tariffs on trade partners, emphasizing that Seoul is already
applying low duties on American products under the free trade agreement
between the two nations.
South Korea’s government on Friday said Deputy Trade Minister Park Jong-won
made the request while traveling to Washington this week for meetings
with unspecified officials from the White House, the Department of
Commerce and the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative. The South
Korean Trade Ministry didn’t say what Park heard from the Americans.
Park cited how South Korean companies were contributing to the U.S.
economy through large-scale business investments and noted that the
country was already imposing low duties on free trade partners such as
the United States. He called for South Korea to be excluded from U.S.
plans to establish reciprocal tariffs with trade partners and raise
duties for imported steel and aluminum, the ministry said.
South Korea’s top economic think tank this month slashed its growth
forecast for the country’s economy for the second time since November,
expressing concern about the impact of U.S. President Donald Trump’s
expanding tariffs and other measures aimed at resetting global trade.
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Vehicles are parked to be exported at a port next to Hyundai Motor's
manufacturing facility in Ulsan, South Korea, Tuesday, Feb. 11,
2025. (Kim Yong-tea/Yonhap via AP)
 The state-run Korea Development
Institute projected the national economy to grow by 1.6% in 2025,
which was 0.4 percentage points lower than its previous estimate.
The group’s economists assessed that Trump’s steel and aluminum
tariffs won’t likely have a major impact on South Korea’s economy,
as those products account for less than 1% of its exports to the
U.S. However, they expressed concern that possible increases in U.S.
duties for semiconductors and cars would hurt the country’s
trade-dependent economy more.
South Korea’s acting president, Choi Sang-mok, on Friday called a
meeting with trade and foreign policy officials to discuss the
potential impact of Trump’s trade measures, including reciprocal
tariffs and possible product-specific duties for semiconductors,
cars and pharmaceuticals.
Choi, who is also South Korea’s finance minister, instructed
officials to examine how other major economies, including the
European Union, Japan and China, are responding to Trump’s trade
policies, and try harder to effectively communicate South Korea’s
position to U.S. officials.
South Korea’s trade surplus with the U.S. reached $55.7 billion in
2024. According to the South Korean trade ministry, the country’s
tariff rates on U.S. manufacturing imports is around zero percent.
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