Sunday, February 23

SEOUL: South Korea will thoroughly review non-tariff barriers and other vulnerabilities to respond to a United States plan to introduce reciprocal tariffs, the country’s acting president said on Friday (Feb 14).

US President Donald Trump tasked his economics team on Thursday with devising plans for reciprocal tariffs on every country taxing US imports, with potential targets including South Korea, China, Japan and the European Union.

“The impact of the reciprocal tariff measures may not be huge on our economy, as tariff rates are low due to the Korea-US Free Trade Agreement,” said Choi Sang-mok, the finance minister who is serving as acting president.

“However, given that the US said it would also assess non-tariff barriers including value-added taxes and taxes on digital services, it is necessary to monitor the situation.”

Among the top 15 US trading partners, South Korea’s tariff rates are the second-highest after India, but nearly all were eliminated by the free trade pact first signed in 2007 and revised in 2018 during Trump’s first term.

Economists have said the pact could help mitigate the country’s exposure to reciprocal tariffs threatened by Trump, with the benchmark KOSPI rising nearly 3 per cent this week to the highest level since early November.

Choi said the government would respond to Trump’s tariff plan by identifying key areas of US interest and preparing explanatory material regarding South Korea’s non-tariff barriers for the Trump administration.

South Korea’s average tariff rate on imports from the US stood at 0.79 per cent as of 2024, and is expected to be lower this year, with no duties on manufactured goods, the finance ministry said in a separate statement.

https://www.channelnewsasia.com/east-asia/south-korea-us-trump-reciprocal-tariff-review-4937916

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