Statement of Christopher Hill
Assistant Secretary of State
Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs
Before the
House Committee on Foreign Affairs
Subcommittee on Terrorism, Nonproliferation, and Trade
June 13, 2007
The United States-South Korea
FTA: The
Foreign Policy Implications
Introduction
The United States’
relationship with South Korea
is changing and growing. It is
transforming into a mature, healthy and balanced partnership. One of the
greatest examples of the dynamism in our bilateral relationship is the recently
concluded United States-South Korea Free Trade Agreement (or KORUS FTA).
While the agreement achieves many of our economic goals, it
is important to note that the impact of this FTA will go far beyond bilateral
commercial benefits. The KORUS FTA is a powerful symbol of the U.S.-South Korea
partnership, augmenting our longstanding bilateral security alliance and the
robust ties between the South Korean and American people. It will create a new dynamic, reflecting both
the growing sophistication of our relationship, and the Republic of Korea’s
(ROK) increasingly positive global role. It will strengthen our relations with one of
our most important and reliable allies, serving as a pillar for the alliance in
the 21st century as the mutual defense treaty did during the last half
century. And it will decisively anchor
the U.S.
presence in the most dynamic and rapidly-growing economic region on the globe.
Benefits of KORUS
FTA
I’ll let my colleague Karan Bhatia, who oversaw the negotiation
of this historic agreement, including through several sleepless nights in Seoul
leading up to our April 1 conclusion of the deal, explain the benefits of the
KORUS FTA for U.S. commercial interests and our global trade liberalization
strategy – which are significant. His familiarity
with the details of the agreement far exceeds my own. Instead, I will focus my remarks on the
agreement’s foreign policy implications.
First, the KORUS FTA will strengthen the U.S.-South Korea
partnership. It will help
ensure that the U.S. partnership
with South Korea,
long centered on defense ties, remains a vital force for stability at a
time of change and challenge on the Korean peninsula and in the broader Northeast
Asian region. It will be concrete proof to South Korea that we are committed
to broadening and modernizing our alliance.
Over the years, the U.S.
relationship with South Korea
has been tested in many ways. But I've always been optimistic about it,
because I always have seen the real benefits of a strong relationship between
the U.S.
and the ROK. Our two countries are bound
by shared interests and shared values, underpinning the long-term commitment of
both Americans and Koreans to making the relationship work.
South
Korea is a country that is not just a regional power, but
it's growing in global importance. Korean
people are active all over the world as students, diplomats and missionaries,
and South Korean companies are major investors in many economies. More
and more, our relationship with South
Korea is growing to be a multi-faceted,
cooperative partnership for a more closely knit world.
South Korea is the third-largest contributor of
troops to the coalition forces in Iraq
and has played an important role in Afghanistan as well. Nowadays when Secretary Rice meets with her
ROK counterparts, they talk not just about the situation on the Peninsula, but
also about the Middle East, climate change, the spread of democracy and other global
issues of shared concern.
We've been working hard lately on modernizing our
security relationship with South
Korea.
We are realigning our troops to make sure that they are placed and
equipped most intelligently to deter any thought of aggression by North Korea. I think we're doing that very effectively.
We’ve also been working very closely with our
friends from the ROK in the Six-Party Talks to deal with the issue of North Korea’s
nuclear program. Ultimately, as we move forward in the six-party process,
it's very important that we move beyond denuclearization in North Korea to
try to create stronger multilateral mechanisms for problem-solving in the
region and for developing a greater sense of community in the region. I
think in this regard, South Korean and U.S. interests are very much
aligned.
Second,
the KORUS FTA strengthens our ties to a good friend that has done good
things. I had
the privilege of serving in South
Korea in 1987 and witnessed the flowering of
democracy there. I then went back as
Ambassador in 2004 to see what had happened since. It is really quite an
inspiration for all of us who believe that democracy is the wave of the
future. South
Korea has shown the way and become an example for
political reform in many parts of the world, especially in Asia.
The FTA will also provide a boost to the steady
progress that South Korea
has made on economic reform in the last decade. South Korea is one of the world’s great success stories in terms of
achieving broad prosperity through commitment to a market economy and openness
to global trade. By liberating the vitality of its citizens and exposing
them to international competition, South Korea has gone from being one
of the world’s poorest countries at the end of the Korean War to a vibrant
democracy, a member of the OECD with a per-capita GDP approaching
$20,000. South Korea
also has strong labor laws and environmental protections. All this makes South
Korea an excellent trading
partner for the United
States.
Along with our
expanding trade ties, I should also point out the very substantial people-to-people
ties between our two countries. There are now over two million Americans of
Korean descent living in the United
States. They have had a huge positive impact on our
country and continue to provide a vital and unique link between the two nations.
U.S.-ROK academic ties have also blossomed; in 2006, more than 58,000 South Korean
students studied in the U.S.,
and South Korean students are now the third largest group of foreign students
in the U.S. The FTA has the potential to join our two
countries together even more closely.
Third, the KORUS FTA will anchor our strategic economic
position in East Asia. East Asia and the Pacific region are undergoing a wave
of economic integration, with countries binding themselves closer together
through steady progress in liberalization of trade and investment. Several plurilateral free trade agreements
are in play, and some 19 free trade agreements have gone into force between
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) economies, with at least an equal
number of future agreements under negotiation or exploration. The United
States has participated as a leader via our gold-standard
FTAs with Australia and Singapore. Ratification of the KORUS FTA will further cement
U.S.
leadership in the dynamic Asian region and debunk critics who falsely complain
that we’ve neglected this part of the world.
South Korea,
like the United States,
has taken an aggressive approach toward binding trade liberalization. It has completed FTAs with Chile and the
European Free Trade Area (EFTA) and is working on a second phase of
negotiations with five of the ten ASEAN countries (having already completed a
framework and trade in goods agreement).
South Korea is also
in the final stages of FTA negotiations with Canada,
negotiating an agreement with India,
just starting negotiations with the EU, and is studying the feasibility of
launching an FTA with China.
Negotiations with Japan
have been on hold the last two years, but it is possible they could be
revived. Thus, by ratifying the KORUS FTA, our firms will enjoy a
competitive advantage in South Korea
– Asia’s third-largest economy – ahead of
others. On the other hand, if we fail to
ratify, we will not just stand still, we will move backwards.
Fourth, and finally, the KORUS FTA will give impetus to
global trade liberalization: By
demonstrating that two large, advanced economies can conclude a high-quality
agreement eliminating both tariff and non-tariff barriers to trade and
investment, the KORUS FTA could help spur further trade liberalization both
within the Asia-Pacific region and globally. It will send a signal to our
other trading partners, encouraging them to open their economies and creating
a competitive dynamic that would spur more rapid
progress on the multilateral trade liberalization front.
Conclusion
The impact of this FTA will go far beyond bilateral
commercial benefits. It is a powerful symbol of the U.S.-South Korea
partnership, augmenting our longstanding bilateral security alliance and the
robust ties between the South Korean and American people. It will create
a new dynamic, reflecting both the growing sophistication of our bilateral
relationship and the Republic
of Korea’s increasingly
positive role in the world.
Thank you for the opportunity to appear before the
Subcommittee. I am happy to answer your
questions.