- Registration date2024-09-13
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Korea’s Minister for Trade Inkyo Cheong met various key figures in the Biden administration, U.S. Congress, academia, and financial circles in Washington D.C. and New York City during his visit from September 11–12 as part of outreach activities to advance the mutually beneficial economic and trade cooperation between Korea and the U.S. amid increasing changes in the trade environment.
Among those in the current administration, Trade Minister Cheong met with Deputy Secretary of Commerce Don Graves and discussed the outcomes and follow-up measures to the Korea-U.S. Supply Chain and Commercial Dialogue Ministerial Meeting and the Korea-Japan-U.S. trilateral Commerce and Industry Ministerial Meeting held in June, as well as Korea’s Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity (IPEF) Crisis Response Network chairmanship and other trade issues.
The trade chief met U.S. Representative Young Kim to discuss visa issues and asked support for investment incentives under the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) and other agendas of interest for Korean businesses. He also met with former Representatives Ron Kind, Jim Davis, and Tom Davis to discuss response measures to future U.S. industrial and trade policies.
At Google’s New York headquarters, he sat down with executives to exchange views on digital trade policy development and ways to deepen Korea-U.S. advanced technology cooperation in AI, smart devices, and cloud computing before touring the cutting-edge working environment at Google’s New York campus.
Meanwhile, Trade Minister Cheong took part in the various events convened on the occasion of his visit. He attended the Korea-U.S. Economic Cooperation Seminar and Investors Roundtable for wider scope of bilateral cooperation and gathered business issues from locally operating Korean companies. On the last day of his trip, he met with experts from LG Business Research and U.S. law firm Arnold & Porter at the Korea-U.S. Economic Cooperation Seminar to take stock of trade, investment and technology cooperation outcomes.
Lastly, the trade minister met Eurasia Group President Ian Bremmer among other leaders of major think tanks like Asia Society to assess the Korea-U.S. alliance and its role amid the rapidly changing global dynamics. In view of the growing geopolitical importance placed on East Asia, they discussed tasks to tackle for Korea to rise as a key country in terms of trade, economy, and security.
Trade Minister Cheong stated that this trip to the U.S. leading up to its presidential elections is expected to further catalyze the two countries’ economic exchanges going forward.