Facing US tariffs and China’s export controls, Lee must navigate economic pragmatism without jeopardizing alliance
China’s new export controls on tungsten, molybdenum and other key materials have raised alarms in South Korea’s semiconductor and defense industries. At the same time, the U.S. is expanding its semiconductor export controls and imposing tariffs on allies, signaling an increasingly protectionist trade policy.
South Korea finds itself caught between two economic superpowers, and its next president will determine its geopolitical and economic trajectory.
China’s new export controls on tungsten, molybdenum and other key materials have raised alarms in South Korea’s semiconductor and defense industries. At the same time, the U.S. is expanding its semiconductor export controls and imposing tariffs on allies, signaling an increasingly protectionist trade policy.
South Korea finds itself caught between two economic superpowers, and its next president will determine its geopolitical and economic trajectory.
Get your
KoreaPro
subscription today!
Unlock article access by becoming a KOREA PRO member today!
Unlock your access
to all our features.
Standard Annual plan includes:
-
Receive full archive access, full suite of newsletter products
-
Month in Review via email and the KOREA PRO website
-
Exclusive invites and priority access to member events
-
One year of access to NK News and NK News podcast
There are three plans available:
Lite, Standard and
Premium.
Explore which would be
the best one for you.
Explore membership options
© Korea Risk Group. All rights reserved.
No part of this content may be reproduced, distributed, or used for
commercial purposes without prior written permission from Korea Risk
Group.