South Korea ruling party to propose bill for US investment under tariff deal, report says

South Korea to introduce bill enabling US$350B investment as tariff cuts from 25% to 15% take effect retroactively under trade deal. - REUTERS
SEOUL: South Korea's ruling Democratic Party will propose a bill this week that would facilitate the country's investment in the U.S. under a deal that cuts tariffs on the country's exports, financial news service Money Today reported on Tuesday.
AI Brief
- South Korea and the Democratic Party plan to introduce a bill on Nov 26 to implement the trade deal with the US.
- The deal lowers US import duties on South Korean goods from 25% to 15%, retroactive to the bills introduction month.
- In return, South Korea commits US$350B investment in US strategic industries.
The two countries on November 14 announced the details of implementing the deal reached by their presidents in late October that would lower U.S. import duties on South Korean goods from 25% to 15%.
South Korea agreed to invest a total of $350 billion in strategic industries in the U.S. in return.
The U.S. tariff cut goes into effect retroactively on the first of the month in which a bill is introduced to the South Korean parliament to structure the investment, the country's Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan has said.
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