South Korea parliament due to finalise draft US investment bill under trade deal

Employees work at Pyeongtaek port in Pyeongtaek, South Korea, July 8, 2025.

A South Korean parliamentary committee is expected to finalise the wording of a special bill on Monday, ​paving the way for a plenary vote this ‌week to enable $350 billion of U.S. investments under a bilateral trade deal between the countries.

The bill is expected to be put to a ​full National Assembly vote on March 12, as ​the U.S. ally responds to pressure from Washington over ⁠perceived delays in enacting the deal.

The “Special Act on Investment ​in the U.S.” will set up an investment vehicle, as ​well as a risk management committee to implement last year’s agreement for South Korea to invest in sectors such as shipbuilding and chips in ​return for lower U.S. tariffs.

U.S. President Donald Trump threatened in January ​to hike tariffs on imports from South Korea, accusing the country’s parliament ‌of ⁠delays in enacting the trade deal.

Top South Korean officials have said the U.S.-South Korea trade deal remains valid despite a U.S. Supreme Court decision in February that struck down a large ​swath of Trump’s ​tariffs.

Officials in ⁠Seoul have, however, voiced concerns about the impact of U.S. investments on an already weak ​won currency and said that projects would be ​based ⁠on consideration of commercial feasibility and foreign exchange market conditions.

The special committee, which includes lawmakers from the ruling Democratic Party and ⁠the ​opposition People Power Party, is expected to ​review the final bill at a subcommittee on Monday and approve it at a general ​meeting in the afternoon.

Source: Reported by special correspondent of Pacific Geopolitical Research Association.

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