Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Trump claims trade victory vs. S. Korea

But his bare-knuckles approach might not work with China

- By David J. Lynch

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion bills its success in reworking a trade deal with South Korea as vindicatio­n for the “America First” approach the president promised on trade policy, including a robust carrot-and-stick diplomatic style.

“This agreement is visionary and innovative, and it underscore­s a pattern of failure by previous administra­tions to negotiate fair and reciprocal trade deals,” a senior administra­tion official told reporters Tuesday night.

Confirming reports from Seoul this week, White House officials said that they had reached a “historic” agreement in principle with the South Korean government to overhaul the existing Korea-U.S. trade deal known as KORUS.

South Korea agreed to limit its steel exports to the United States, a key U.S. goal, and take several steps to open its auto market to American companies. In return, President Donald Trump agreed to exempt South Korea from his new 25 percent tariff on imported steel.

But threatenin­g negotiat-

ing partners with tariffs unless they make concession­s, as the United States did with South Korea, is a tactic that Washington often used before the creation of the World Trade Organizati­on, though one that did little to reduce bilateral trade deficits.

It also may prove a riskier strategy when U.S. negotiator­s take on more powerful countries, including China, the largest U.S. trading partner. U.S. negotiator­s also confront a longer list of issues in talks aimed at renegotiat­ing another trade deal, the North American Free Trade Agreement.

Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch, said the “limited” achievemen­ts in the new South Korean accord fell short of the revolution in trade policy that the president has promised and “puts added pressure on the NAFTA renegotiat­ions to deliver a deal that eliminates the job outsourcin­g incentives in our past trade deals and adds strong labor and environmen­tal standards with swift and strong enforcemen­t.”

Still, administra­tion officials regard the South Korean agreement as a big political win for the president and a sign of fundamenta­l change in Washington’s approach to trade disputes.

For nearly a quarter-century, the U.S. government has taken most of its complaints about unfair trade practices to the WTO. The Geneva-based global trade body presides over a quasijudic­ial process designed to drain the political heat from disputes, with final settlement­s often taking years to materializ­e.

Trump has no interest in letting the heat dissipate. “He’s resurrecti­ng the 1980s — a series of political compromise­s, mostly with Japan, to deal with U.S. concerns,” said Edward Alden, with the Council on Foreign Relations. “That was the Reagan playbook. The reason it hasn’t been used in a long time is the U.S. made a decision that binding dispute settlement was better than tariffs as a weapon.”

Starting with a 1981 accord that set a ceiling on imports of Japanese vehicles, the United States tried for much of that decade to close its trade deficit with Japan through voluntary export restraints. Dozens of other deals limited shipments of Japanese products such as steel, machine tools and semiconduc­tors, while the 1985 Plaza Accord lowered the dollar’s value in a bid to boost U.S. exports.

The agreements defused politicall­y sensitive controvers­ies but left the U.S. trade deficit with Japan higher at the end of the 1980s than it was when the two countries began implementi­ng the voluntary limits.

Trump and his chief trade negotiator, Robert Lighthizer, lack faith in the multilater­al trading system that Republican­s and Democrats have shared since the WTO’s founding in 1995. They prefer a nationalis­tic approach that offers access to the U.S. economy while threatenin­g unilateral tariffs.

“The Trump-Lighthizer approach is (that) throwing around the weight of the world’s largest market is more effective than working through the WTO system,” Alden said.

Trump threatened for more than a year to rip up trade deals unless U.S. negotiatin­g partners made concession­s designed to return lost manufactur­ing jobs to the United States. All that tough talk did not produce much - until this past weekend, when South Korea said it agreed to revise a 6-year-old trade deal that Trump had derided as “horrible” and “a disaster.”

In 2017, the United States ran a deficit of $22.9 billion in its trade with South Korea, compared with $16.6 billion in 2012, the year KORUS took effect. The new deal is expected to reduce the gap by several billion dollars, a U.S. trade official said.

“The agreement did not perform up to its expectatio­ns,” said a second senior administra­tion official. “We have been disappoint­ed over and over.”

Under the new deal, U.S. automakers can ship 50,000 cars that comply with U.S. safety standards rather than tougher South Korean requiremen­ts. But Ford and General Motors last year sent fewer than 10,000 cars each to South Korea, where American cars lag behind German vehicles in popularity.

The United States also won the right to retain an existing 25 percent tariff on imported pickup trucks for 20 years beyond its scheduled expiration in 2021. To date, no South Korean company has exported trucks to the United States, although Hyundai has plans to do so.

The administra­tion’s approach appears to have succeeded in this instance.

“We caught them at a vulnerable time, and we threatened to pull the rug out from under them,” Levy said. “Korea could not afford to have a major split with the United States.”

 ?? JIM LO SCALZO/EPA ?? Critics say President Trump prefers to offer access to the U.S. while threatenin­g unilateral tariffs.
JIM LO SCALZO/EPA Critics say President Trump prefers to offer access to the U.S. while threatenin­g unilateral tariffs.

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