SEOUL (Reuters) -South Korea appointed former chief trade envoy Yeo Han-koo as its top trade negotiator, the president’s office said on Tuesday, as Asia’s fourth largest economy prepares for negotiations with Washington to reduce the tariffs.
The U.S. imposed 25% levies on South Korea on April 2, one of the highest tariffs for a U.S. ally, though they have been suspended until early July. Cutting tariffs is a top policy priority for South Korea’s new President Lee Jae-myung after a leadership vacuum in recent months helped delay talks between Seoul and Washington.
The president also appointed statistics agency chief Lee Hyoung-il as first vice finance minister to lead the ministry until a finance minister is formally appointed, Lee’s spokesperson Kang Yu-jung said.
Sectoral tariffs have hurt South Korea’s key industries including cars, aluminium and steel.
Yeo was trade chief between August 2021 and early 2022 during left-leaning President Moon Jae-in’s administration and was involved in Korea-U.S. talks under the first Trump administration.
While serving as commercial attache at the Korean Embassy in Washington, he was involved in amendment negotiations of the Korea-U.S. Free Trade Agreement and Section 232 steel negotiations in 2017.
For the past two years Yeo has been a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.
(Reporting by Jack Kim, Cynthia Kim; Additional reporting by Hyunjoo Jin; Editing by Sharon Singleton and Susan Fenton)