South Korea and the United States held vice-ministerial economic cooperation talks in Seoul on Nov. 6, largely aimed at enhancing their key regional policy initiatives in Southeast Asia and the Indo-Pacific region, the Foreign Ministry said.
The Senior Economic Dialogue took place between Second Vice Foreign Minister Lee Tae-ho and Keith Krach, undersecretary for economic growth, energy and the environment at the State Department. It was the fourth session to be held since its 2015 launch.
The talks were expected to center on identifying overlap between Seoul’s New Southern Policy and Washington’s Indo-Pacific Strategy -- signature regional policy initiatives being pushed by their respect governments -- and coordinating ways to advance the shared goals toward tangible progress.
“The SED has become a core pillar to further strengthen bilateral economic partnership under the robust Korea-US alliance,” Lee said ahead of the meeting.
“I’m pleased to know that SED has now matured into yielding some concrete projects and results and I think there will be more to come in various areas.”
In response, Krach appreciated the allies’ shared goals in the regions, noting that strengthening cooperation in those fields is not just about enhancing bilateral ties but reaffirming commitment toward a global issue.
“That economic relationship extends far beyond trade and investment. It really extends to the global economic security area. That is so critical. Especially in times like this, to be able to leverage the power and innovation and resources in the private sector -- I know we‘re very like-minded on that,” he said.
The two sides are expected to issue a joint statement following the meeting.
By Ram Garikipati and newswires (ram@heraldcorp.com)