SEOUL, Jan 30 - The United States and South Korea finished the opening day of in-person trade negotiations without reaching a conclusion, Yonhap reported on Friday. The talks occurred amid heightened tensions after U.S. President Donald Trump publicly threatened to raise tariffs on South Korean exports.
South Korea's Industry Minister, Kim Jung-kwan, held meetings at the U.S. Department of Commerce in Washington and is scheduled to meet again with Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick tomorrow, according to Yonhap. The Industry Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the outcome of the sessions.
The discussions followed public complaints by the U.S. president on social media earlier in the week, when he said South Korea's parliament had not passed legislation needed to implement a trade agreement reached last year. In those posts, the president vowed to raise duties on autos and other goods.
Those remarks appeared to take Seoul by surprise and prompted South Korean officials to move quickly to reassure the United States that they remained committed to enacting the trade deal. The pact, as described in reporting on the talks, ties tariff concessions to large-scale investments in U.S. business projects by South Korean entities.
On Tuesday, the president said the two countries would work toward a resolution. In parallel diplomatic moves, South Korea's trade envoy Yeo Han-koo departed Seoul for Washington to meet with the U.S. trade negotiator Jamieson Greer.
With senior ministers and envoys involved on both sides, scheduling of follow-up meetings in Washington indicates talks will continue. Officials in Seoul are attempting to balance domestic legislative processes with commitments made under the trade deal while responding to public pressure from the U.S. president to show progress.
At this stage, parties have not announced a formal agreement or detailed timeline for implementing the outstanding elements of the pact. The close of the first day of face-to-face negotiations leaves the outcome uncertain as delegations prepare for further discussions in the coming days.