The Proposed U.S.-South Korea Free Trade Agreement (KORUS FTA): Provisions and Implications

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Abstract:

On June 30, 2007, U.S. and South Korean trade officials signed the proposed U.S.-South Korean Free Trade Agreement KORUS FTA for their respective countries. If approved, the KORUS FTA would be the largest FTA that South Korea has signed to date and would be the second largest next to North American Free Trade Agreement, NAFTA in which the United States participates. South Korea is the seventh-largest trading partner of the United States and the United States is South Koreas third largest trading partner. Various studies conclude that the agreement would increase bilateral trade and investment flows. The final text of the proposed KORUS FTA covers a wide range of trade and investment issues and, therefore, could have wide economic implications for both the United States and South Korea. The KORUS FTA includes issues on which the two countries achieved early agreement, such as the elimination on tariffs on trade in most manufactured goods and the partial liberalization in services trade. The agreement also includes provisions on a number of very sensitive issues, such as autos, agriculture, and trade remedies, on which agreement was reached only during the final hours of negotiations.

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