Shaping a New Economic Relationship

The Republic of Korea and the United States (Hoover Institution Press Publication, No 417)

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July 23, 2024 | History

Shaping a New Economic Relationship

The Republic of Korea and the United States (Hoover Institution Press Publication, No 417)

  • 0 Ratings
  • 1 Want to read
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This conference volume examines the causes of the huge trade surplus between the United States and the Republic of Korea in the 1980s (in Korea's favor) and how that trade imbalance was eliminated by 1991 without trade volume declining.

Both countries had enjoyed friendly relations ever since the United States led U.N. troops to save South Korea from being taken over by communist North Korea. From the mid-fifties until the early eighties, their economic relationship was based on a complementary trade relationship instead of an adversarial one.

Korea exported labor-intensive products such as consumer electronics, textiles, and footwear, and the United States exported resource-based and agricultural products and capital goods such as chemicals and machinery.

In these same years Korea rapidly expanded its manufacturing exports, and those to the United States reached a peak in the late 1980s. After 1980 the Reagan administration tax reform and the U.S. government's failure to cut spending pumped enormous income into the private sector, which encouraged consumers and business firms to purchase imports on an unprecedented basis, chiefly from East Asia.

American manufacturing firms were adversely affected by high interest rates in the early eighties and the flood of low-priced, high-quality foreign imports. Misinformation and misunderstanding of these complex trends led many businesspeople to blame America's expanding trade imbalance, especially with countries like Korea, mainly on trade barriers erected by America's trading partners.

Turning to Washington for help, American businesspeople demanded their government reduce the flood of foreign imports and increase U.S. access to foreign markets. The Republic of Korea was targeted for such action

.

The United States applied a three-pronged policy to reduce the Korean-U.S. trade deficit. Under threat of sanctions, Korea speeded-up the dismantling of its tariff system. More important, U.S. Treasury policies compelled Korea to appreciate its currency, the won, and introduce a flexible rather than a fixed-exchange-rate system. Finally, the United States restricted some Korean imports.

By 1991 the trade balance had shifted in favor of the United States, but at the expense of deteriorating political relations between the two countries. This volume evaluates these complex developments and offers policy recommendations for how both countries in the future might avoid the bitter politicization of trade disputes of the recent past and expand their economic relations.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
202

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Shaping a New Economic Relationship
Shaping a New Economic Relationship: The Republic of Korea and the United States (Hoover Institution Press Publication, No 417)
September 1993, Hoover Institution Press
Paperback in English
Cover of: Shaping a new economic relationship
Shaping a new economic relationship: the Republic of Korea and the United States
1993, Hoover Institution Press, Stanford University
in English

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Book Details


Classifications

Library of Congress
HF1602.5.Z4 U67 1993, HF1602.5.Z4U67 1993

The Physical Object

Format
Paperback
Number of pages
202
Dimensions
9 x 6 x 0.6 inches
Weight
12 ounces

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL11388526M
Internet Archive
shapingneweconom00mojo
ISBN 10
0817992529
ISBN 13
9780817992521
LCCN
93024019
OCLC/WorldCat
28257203

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