The Korea Herald

Finance chiefs of Korea, US, Japan to hold 3-way talks for first time

- By Park Han-na (hnpark@heraldcorp.com)

Finance leaders from South Korea, the United States and Japan were set to hold their first-ever trilateral meeting in Washington on Wednesday, to step up economic cooperatio­n amid heightened geopolitic­al risks in the Middle East.

Finance Minister Choi Sang-mok departed for the US on Tuesday to attend the three-way meeting, as well as a meeting of Group of 20 finance ministers and central bank presidents as part of the annual Spring Meetings between the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and the World Bank, scheduled to take place between Wednesday and Friday.

According to the Ministry of Economy and Finance on Tuesday, Choi is to meet with US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, and Japanese Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki to “strengthen economic and financial cooperatio­n to stabilize global economic order.”

The US Department of Treasury said the gathering would focus on “sanctions on Russia and Iran to secure supply chains and build climate and financial resilience in the Pacific Islands.”

Amid the growing tensions in the Middle East due to Iran’s retaliator­y attacks on Israel, eyes are on whether the financial chiefs of the three countries will jointly respond to the geopolitic­al crisis security threats.

The Middle East conflict fueled further concern over the tumbling Asian stock market and their weakened currencies against the US dollar after the US Federal Reserve showed signs that it would continue holding interest rates steady for longer than expected.

Top finance policymake­rs from Korea and the US held meetings

and

economic in 2016 and 2022, and meetings between the finance ministers of Korea and Japan resumed last year after a seven-year hiatus, as the strained relations between the two countries eased. The Wednesday meeting is the first trilateral gathering between the three countries’ finance chiefs.

The meeting is a follow-up event to a trilateral summit between South Korean President Yoon Suk

Yeol, US President Joe Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, which took place last year at Camp David on Aug. 18.

At the summit, the three leaders agreed to strengthen cooperatio­n in areas such as promoting regional security, strengthen­ing deterrence, coordinati­ng developmen­t and humanitari­an aid, and responding to North Korea’s illegal cyber activities.

During the ministeria­l roundtable discussion on support for Ukraine, Choi plans to present follow-up measures in line with the commitment­s made by President Yoon last September to provide $2.3 billion in aid for the war-torn country to help it restore peace and rebuild following its war with Russia.

In the first session of the G20 Finance Ministers’ Meeting, the Korean minister plans to propose the need to strengthen cooperatio­n with various entities, including the private sector, to achieve carbon neutrality and fair transition goals which seek to ensure that the substantia­l benefits of a green economy transition are widely shared, while also supporting those who stand to lose out economical­ly.

On the second day of the G20 Finance Ministers’ Meeting, the Korean government plans to present measures to improve the internatio­nal financial system for sustainabl­e growth, including reform of the multilater­al developmen­t bank in response to the new internatio­nal financial environmen­t.

On Friday, Choi will take part in the joint World Bank-IMF Developmen­t Committee meeting to discuss progress on the World Bank Evolution Roadmap put forward during the same event held in Marrakech, Morocco, last October. The roadmap detailed ways to strengthen the bank’s operationa­l and financial model, enhancing its country-driven model, including an agreement on eight global challenges and the $50 billion of additional lending capacity over the next ten years.

Choi plans to meet with Ukrainian Finance Minister Serhiy Mykhailovy­ch Marchenko to sign a framework agreement for the Korea-Ukraine Economic Developmen­t Co-operation Fund to lay the legal groundwork for supporting Ukraine’s mid-to-long-term aid package.

Choi will hold a meeting with Roberto Sifon Arevalo, global head of sovereign analytics and research at S&P Global Ratings, to brief Arevalo on Korea’s economic situation and policy direction this year. He will reveal plans for continuing efforts to maintain the solid external credibilit­y of the Korean economy.

 ?? Yonhap ?? Finance Minister Choi Sang-mok (left) arrives at Incheon Airport on Tuesday, to travel to Washington for a meeting of the Group of 20 finance ministers in this photo provided by the Finance Ministry.
Yonhap Finance Minister Choi Sang-mok (left) arrives at Incheon Airport on Tuesday, to travel to Washington for a meeting of the Group of 20 finance ministers in this photo provided by the Finance Ministry.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Korea, Republic