BSS
  28 Mar 2025, 11:38

Seoul announces rare top trade meeting with Tokyo, Beijing

SEOUL, March 28, 2025 (BSS/AFP) - Top trade officials from South Korea, Japan and China will meet this weekend in Seoul to discuss economic cooperation, a South Korean government source said Friday.

The announcement of the rare meeting -- the first in five years -- comes days after US President Donald Trump announced the imposition of 25 percent tariffs on all cars and light trucks not built on US soil.

Seoul and Tokyo are major auto exporters, and China has also been hit hard by US tariff measures.

A South Korean government source told AFP that the "Trilateral Economic and Trade Ministers' Meeting" will be held on Sunday morning in Seoul.

The meeting is expected to be attended by South Korea's industry minister Ahn Duk-geun and his Japanese counterpart, Yoji Muto, plus China's Wang Wentao.

There will also be bilateral meetings between the nations.

South Korea's Minister Ahn said Thursday that because 50 percent of South Korea's automobile exports go to the United States, the tariffs "raise concerns over significant damage to the industry".

"The process of responding to US tariff measures will not be resolved in a single round of talks, and is expected to take time," said Ahn during an emergency meeting.

"Despite growing global uncertainties, the government will stand with our companies throughout this process," he added.

Trump imposed more blanket tariffs on Chinese imports earlier this month, following a similar move last month -- levies expected to hit hundreds of billions of dollars in total trade between the world's two largest economies.

Commerce Minister Wang Wentao warned that US tariffs threatened to "disrupt the stability of the global industrial supply chain and hinder the development of the global economy".

He told reporters that "if the United States continues down this wrong path, we will fight to the end".

The Japanese government's spokesman also said Thursday that the US tariffs on auto imports were "extremely regrettable."

Japan is home to the world's top-selling carmaker Toyota, and the health of the auto industry impacts many sectors, from parts manufacturing to steel and microchips.

Of the country's 21.3 trillion yen ($145 billion) of US-bound exports in 2024, cars and other vehicles accounted for roughly a third.