Plant

South Korean auto workers blast revised trade deal with US

By ASSOCIATED PRESS   

Industry Automotive Government Manufacturing automotive free trade Kia labour manufacturing South Korea Trump

Top negotiator said it will have little impact: there are currently no domestically produced pick-up trucks exported to the US.

SEOUL, Korea, Republic Of — Unions at South Korea’s two-largest automakers, Hyundai Motor Co. and Kia Motors Corp., have blasted plans to revise a free trade deal with the United States, saying the amended deal will prevent local automakers from entering the fast-growing US pick-up truck market.

“It is a humiliating deal that accepts Trump’s strategy to preemptively block South Korean pick-up trucks,” Hyundai Motor’s labour union said in a statement.

As part of talks on revamping a free trade deal that took effect in 2012, South Korea and the US agreed to push back the earlier agreed-to elimination of import tariffs on pick-up trucks by 20 years to 2041. South Korea’s top negotiator said that the move will have little impact on the local auto makers because there are currently no domestically produced pick-up trucks exported to the US.

RELATED

SKorea to open auto market wider to US in revised trade deal.

Advertisement

However, Hyundai’s labour union complained that the government gave in to US President Donald Trump at a time when the American market represents big opportunities.

Big US automakers are trying to “kill the South Korean auto industry,” it said.

Kia’s labour union said it shares that view.

Hyundai said in a statement that it hoped the two governments would work together for further development of the automotive industry. It would not comment on issue of tariffs on pick-up truck exports.

The outcome of the negotiations was mixed. While some complained about concessions in the auto sector, South Korea did win an exemption from recently announced import tariffs on its steel products.

While Hyundai, the maker of the Sonata and Tucson, does not produce pick-up trucks, in 2015 and in 2016, it displayed prototypes that might be produced in within several years.

Hyundai and Kia, which belong to the world’s fifth-largest automotive group, have been struggling as sales slow in China and the US. The pick-up trucks could help offset that weakness.

Ssangyong Motor Co., the Korean unit of India’s Mahindra & Mahindra and the only auto brand in South Korea that produces pick-up trucks, said it expects little impact from the revision of the trade deal because it does not plan to enter the US market. Ssangyong’s Korando Sports and and Rexton Sports pick-up trucks are sold in Europe and South America.

Advertisement

Stories continue below

Print this page

Related Stories