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US unlikely to increase tariffs on South Korea, Seoul official says

By Thomson Reuters Mar 8, 2026 | 5:40 AM

SEOUL, March 8 (Reuters) – South Korea’s Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan on Sunday said the U.S. is unlikely ​to slap higher tariffs on South ‌Korea should the Korean parliament move swiftly to implement investment legislation sought by the U.S. next week as scheduled.

Seoul has been in ‌talks ​with Washington after ⁠U.S. President Donald Trump ⁠threatened to hike tariffs on goods imported from South Korea to 25%, blaming a delay in the Asian ​ally’s enactment of commitments to invest $350 billion in the U.S. as agreed ⁠in a trade deal ⁠last year.

“The U.S. expressed gratitude ​for (South Korea’s) upcoming plans to approve the ​U.S. investment act and the way ‌I heard things from them is that there won’t be an official announcement to raise tariffs if what we ⁠discussed from the deal gets implemented,” Kim said in televised remarks after meeting U.S. Secretary ⁠of ‌Commerce Howard Lutnick.

South Korea’s ruling ⁠Democratic Party will hold a ​vote ‌on March 12 to pass ​a special ⁠bill to make investments in the U.S. under the trade deal between the countries, the party’s floor leader said on Wednesday.

(Reporting by Cynthia Kim; Editing by ​Sonali Paul)