Working Iowans Should Oppose the US-South Korea Free Trade Agreement

Working Iowans Should Oppose the US-South Korea Free Trade Agreement


by Paul Deaton

On Friday, Senator Chuck Grassley (R-IA) released an article on his government web site
titled “Q & A: Export Markets for Iowa.” In it, among other things,
he promoted the United States-South Korea Free Trade Agreement that has
been re-negotiated by the Obama administration. In the article,
Grassley covers the benefits of the agreement, citing a potential growth
of $1.6 billion in agricultural exports to South Korea where the United
States is already that nation's largest trading partner. The agreement
would phase out South Korean tariffs on beef, pork, corn and soybeans,
which would benefit Iowa's large scale, industrial agriculture
producers.



While
big agriculture would benefit from a U.S.-South Korea Free Trade
Agreement, the other side of the coin is that South Korea would benefit
from greater access to U.S. Markets. What does South Korea export? Among
their key exports are
electronic goods like semi conductors and computers, along with more
traditional items like foodstuffs, iron and steel, automobiles, textiles
(footwear and apparel), office machinery and other manufactured goods.
In other words, the U.S.-South Korea Free Trade Agreement would further
the globalization of the industrial economies to benefit large
corporations, supporting jobs in South Korea that used to be in the
United States. Where does that leave Iowans?




When former Secretary of State Colin Powell was in Iowa last year, he said that the future under a U.S. South Korea Free Trade agreement would look like the South Korean owned company PMX Industries, Inc. with U.S. operations based in Cedar Rapids.



The
company created Iowa manufacturing jobs making copper and copper alloys
included in things we use every day like computers, telephones, hand
held electronic devices, ammunition, locks on our doors, and coinage,
including some of our U.S. Coins. While the profits of PMX Industries
may flow back to the Korean parent company Poongsan Corporation, it is undeniable that the presence of their plant in Cedar Rapids creates economic benefit for Iowans.




It is old news
that dumping of steel, by South Korea and other countries, on the U.S.
economy jeopardized the long term viability of our industry and workers.
At the same time, when Senator Grassley, House Speaker Boehner and
others speak for the need to ratify the U.S.- South Korea Free Trade
Agreement, there is an underlying presumption that members of the middle
class are either not paying attention or have forgotten that
unrestricted access to U.S. markets benefits the wealthy and puts
pressure on the middle class. While a protectionist stance is not always
good for Iowans, one asks, “what is it we aren't being told about this
agreement?”




As Blog for Iowa reported,
Poongsan Chairman and CEO Jin Ryu is politically well connected in the
United States and has a close, personal relationship with Colin Powell
and other members of the two Bush administrations. His influence is
evident in what little public discussion there has been over the
U.S.-South Korea Free Trade Agreement. While we don't know what
narratives are being spun within Chairman Ryu's sphere of influence,
what we do know is that this trade agreement, if ratified, would be
another weapon for large corporations to use in the assault on Iowa
working people. If you can find someone who knows about this agreement,
stand up for working Iowans and oppose it.

Read our other Blog for Iowa articles about the U.S.-South Korea Free Trade Agreement here, here and here.

~Paul Deaton is a
native Iowan living in rural Johnson County and weekend editor of
Blog for Iowa.
E-mail
Paul
Deaton

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1 Response to Working Iowans Should Oppose the US-South Korea Free Trade Agreement

  1. Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

    The United States’ trade gap is the proverbial “leak-in the-dike” with its de-simulative effect on our recovery. In November 2003, Warren Buffett in his Fortune, Squanderville versus Thriftville article recommended that America adopt a balanced trade model. The fact that advice advocating balance and sustainability, from a sage the caliber of Warren Buffett, could be virtually ignored for over seven years is unfathomable. Media coverage that China has kept it currency undervalued is a gross understatement, it has actually been keeping the U.S. dollar over-valued; which adversely affects all our trade with all our trading partners, not just trade with China. Until action is taken on Buffett’s or a similar balanced trade model, by the powers that be, America will continue to squander time, treasure and talent in pursuit of an illusionary recovery.

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