Business World

USDA, farm businesses head to S. Korea

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WASHINGTON — The U.S. Department of Agricultur­e (USDA) said on Friday it will lead a trade delegation of farm organizati­ons and businesses to South Korea, in an apparent effort to boost opportunit­ies for U.S. farmers in a key U.S. export market.

The planned visit, scheduled for Nov. 5-8, comes after the United States and South Korea signed a revised free trade agreement on Sept. 24 and at a time when American farmers have been struggling due to the absence of Chinese buyers, their largest export market, due to a trade war between Washington and Beijing.

USDA’s Foreign Agricultur­e Service (FAS) Administra­tor Ken Isley will be heading the mission with nearly 50 U.S. agricultur­e businesses which will hold one-to-one meetings with potential customers.

“Korea is consistent­ly among the largest and most reliable export markets for U.S. agricultur­e and the U.S.-Korea Free Trade Agreement, known as KORUS, has opened up even greater opportunit­ies,” Isley said in a statement.

South Korea was the seventh biggest export market for the United States in 2017, according to figures from the office of U.S. Trade Representa­tive (USTR), with U.S. exports to the country totaling $48.3 billion last year.

U.S. farmers have been hit hard by the Trump administra­tion’s ongoing trade dispute with China, which has shut off billions of dollars’ worth of agricultur­al trade between the giant economies.

U.S. Secretary of Agricultur­e Sonny Perdue last month said the United States had probably made a mistake in becoming too trade dependent on China and that the administra­tion was pursuing trade deals elsewhere to diversify its export markets. —

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