U.S. Commerce Secretary Gary Locke, Congressional Delegation Meet with Korean President Lee to Discuss U.S.-Korea Commercial Relationship

U.S. Commerce Secretary Gary Locke, Congressional Delegation Meet with Korean President Lee to Discuss U.S.-Korea Commercial Relationship

The following press release was published by the U.S. Department of Commerce on April 27, 2011. It is reproduced in full below.

Trip intended to build support for KORUS agreement U.S. Commerce Secretary Gary Locke and members of Congress met today with the President of the Republic of Korea Lee Myung-Bak at the Blue House. Locke, who is leading a bipartisan congressional delegation to build support for the passage of the U.S.-Korea Trade Agreement (KORUS), reinforced the importance of the bilateral commercial relationship as part of the two countries’ historic alliance and emphasized the importance of KORUS in spurring economic growth in both the U.S. and Korea.

Locke and the delegation discussed the benefits of KORUS for both the U.S. and Korea in productive bilateral meetings with Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade Kim Sung-Hwan and Trade Minister Kim Jong-Hoon. Earlier in the day, they met with the Board of Governors of the American Chamber of Commerce in Korea, as well as top Korean business executives. Locke and the delegation also met with a diverse group of Korean university students over afternoon tea where they had an in-depth discussion about the youth perspective on KORUS and how various elements of the agreement will benefit the economic future of both countries. They talked about Korea’s impressive economic growth and its emerging economic leadership in the region and the world.

KORUS is the United States’ most commercially significant trade agreement in more than 16 years. Korea is the United States’ 7th largest trading partner, and U.S. goods exports to Korea through February 2011 jumped 10.9 percent compared to the same period in 2010. According to U.S. International Trade Commission estimates, the reduction of Korean tariffs and tariff-rate quotas under KORUS on goods alone would add $10 billion to $11 billion to annual U.S. GDP. By expanding access to Korea, the 12th largest economy in the world, the agreement will support tens of thousands of American jobs, open Korea’s $580 billion services market to American companies, eliminate Korean tariffs on 95 percent of U.S. exports of industrial and consumer goods within five years and immediately eliminate Korean tariffs on over two-thirds of U.S. agricultural exports.

See Secretary Locke’s blog post and Op-Ed on the KORUS Co-Del and pictures from the visit.

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce

More News