Evolution of trade relations between Peru and South
Korea eleven years after the Free Trade Agreement.
https://www.slideshare.net/carlosalbertoaquinorodriguez/evolution-of-trade-relations-between-peru-and-south-korea-eleven-years-after-the-free-trade-agreement
Carlos
Aquino Rodríguez; Maria Osterloh Mejía*
State of issue
In 2011 a free trade agreement (FTA) between Peru and
Korea entered into force, and from that year exports from Peru to Korea have
increased, even if imports have not. Korea become the fifth biggest trade
partner of Peru and its fourth largest export destination.
Not only trade have increased but also investment from
Korea to Peru. In this article the evolution of trade and investment since the
FTA between Peru and Korea entered into force will be seen aa also what are the
perspectives for the economic relations for the two countries.
Causes and analysis.
Peru and South Korea established diplomatic relations
on April 1, 1963, and since then relations have developed smoothly, especially
in the economic field. This year marks the 60th anniversary of the
establishment of diplomatic relations between both nations.
South Korea has become a strategic trading partner,
especially since the middle of the last decade. Peru has had a constant trade
surplus with Korea since 2016, and as it can be seen in Figure 1, bilateral
exchange in 2021 was 3.9 billion dollars, compared with around 3.2 billion
dollars of 2011. This result is because exports, of mainly raw materials, have increased,
even if imports decreased in that period (See below).
In 2010, a year before the FTA entered into force,
South Korea ranked as the eleventh trading partner for Peru. By 2021, this
country became the fifth largest trading partner and the fourth destination
market for Peruvian exports. In addition, between January and November of 2022,
Korea was the fifth destination for Peruvian exports in the world after China,
United States, Japan, and Canada, and the third most important market in Asia.
Figure 1: Peru – South Korea: Evolution of Bilateral
Trade and Trade Balance 2011-2021, million US dollars
Source: Authors elaboration with data from
Superintendencia Nacional de Aduanas y de Administración Tributaria (SUNAT)
As can be seen in Figure 2, between 2011 and 2021 Peruvian exports to
South Korea have almost doubled. In 2021, the percentage of Peruvian exports to
Korea represented 5% of the total exported by Peru, while imports represented
2% of the total.
Figure 2: Peru: Exports to South Korea 2011-2022
Million
USD
Source: Authors elaboration with data from
Superintendencia Nacional de Aduanas y de Administración Tributaria (SUNAT)
As seen in Table 1 and Table 2, bilateral trade between
Peru and Korea is complementary. Peruvian exports are mainly concentrated in a
few products, especially raw materials (called traditional products). In 2011,
when the FTA entered into force, the five main products exported to South Korea
represented 90% of the total exported to this country, these being mainly
minerals and natural gas.
10 years later, the core structure of the export
basket to South Korea have changed little. The value of the amount exported
have increased, but the five main products participation have decreased from
90% to 81%. But thanks to the FTA, Peruvian exports to Korea of so called non-traditional
products have increased. For example, in the case of the export of agricultural
products, they went from 3% of the total exported by Peru to Korea in 2011 to
7% in 2021. Korea opened an important part of its agricultural sector to Peru
and import duties for these goods were reduced or eliminated.
According to the Ministry of Foreign Trade of Peru,
agricultural exports to Korea reached a record amount in 2021 (US$ 204
million), due to higher shipments of fruit (+79%), mainly avocado (+159%), grapes
(+ 119%), Brazil nuts (+66%) and mango (+33%). According to The International
trade Centre, South Korea imported fruits for US$ 1.8 billion in 2021, and Peru
become its 5th biggest supplier that year (7% of the total). In the year 2011,
Peru was the 14th biggest supplier accounting for only 0.2% of the
total[1]. Also,
there are products from the chemical sector that saw its participation in total
exports increase from 0.3% of the total in 2011 to 1% in 2021 and fishery
products from 4% to 5%.
As described before, the exports of mining products
and fuels to South Korea continue to be the ones that increased the most. For
Korea, Peru is an important supplier of mining goods, since it ranked as its
second largest supplier of copper and lead.
Table 1: Comparison of the five first products
exported by Peru to South Korea in 2011 and 2021
Authors elaboration with data from International Trade Centre (ITC)
On the other hand, as can be seen in Table 2, imports
from South Korea are characterized for being inputs, of products of high
technology, such as capital goods, and final consumer goods, therefore,
purchases are highly diversified. In 2011 the first five products imported
represented 37% of the total and in 2021 these represented only 29% of the
total imported. In 2021, imports from South Korea were divided into 28% from
the automotive sector and heavy industry, 18% of plastic industry products, 10%
of fuels, 7% of pharmaceutical products, 5% of steel products, 5% chemical
products, 4% cement and 2% electrical appliances.
Figure 3: Peru: Imports from South Korea
Millions USD
Authors elaboration with data from Superintendencia Nacional de Aduanas
y de Administración Tributaria (SUNAT)
Even so, Peruvian imports from South Korea are
declining, particularly since 2016. This may be explained by the fact that many
of the Korean companies that produce mobile phones, cars, televisions, or other
electric appliances have moved operations to countries like Mexico, Brazil, China,
or Southeast Asian countries. Peru continues buying Korean products, but not assembled
in Korea itself, but from its companies established in other countries.
Table
2: Comparison of the five first products imported from South Korea by Peru in
2011 and 2021
Authors elaboration with data from International Trade Centre (ITC)
This can be seen from the data of imports from 2011 to
2022 of the main Korean companies of tech appliances established in Peru. For
example, LG Electronics Imports Peru purchased in 2011 around 268 million
dollars, of which 45% came from South Korea. In contrast, in 2022 it imported
products for 200 million dollars but from Korea only 10% of the total, and from
Mexico 59%; China 14% and Thailand 12%.
Another good example is Kia Import Peru, that
purchased from the world a total amount of 158 million dollars in 2011 and
99.9% of that came from South Korea. In 2022, this scenario changed. Of the
total 201 million it imported, goods from South Korea represented 50% of the
total; India 21%; China 20% and Mexico 9%[2].
Regarding investment, the FTA has helped to increase
Korean investments in Peru, going from 51.8 million dollars in 2011 to 475.8
million dollars in 2021, increasing eight times more. In 2021, Peru was the
third largest destination of Korean investments in Latin America and the
Caribbean, contrasting with the number eight position in which it was in 2011.
See Figure 4. The FTA includes a chapter on investment, and this replaced the
Bilateral Investment Treaty.
Korean investment arrived in Peru in the 1990s, during
the first wave of internationalization of the companies of that country and amid
the reforms and economic opening that Peru was going through. Between 1994 and
2021 investment from Korean companies in Peru were mainly concentrated in the mining
and fuel sector, accounting for 98% of total stock between those years.
Figure 4: Korean Investment Flow in Peru between 2005 –
2022*, Millions U$D
*Data from January to September
Author’s elaboration with data from Korea Export – Import Bank
For example, in 2018, Korean Japanese consortium LS
Nikko Copper Inc. a trader dedicated to sell molten copper, subscribed an
agreement for one billion dollars with Peruvian company MINSUR to buy copper
concentrates between 2021 and 2030.
On the other hand, companies like Samsung, LG, and
Daewoo, have been in Peru since the late 1990s and are very popular for their
electrical appliances and electronics sold in department stores and in their
own stores, but they do not have assembly plants in the country.
In the construction sector, three projects for the
construction of gas power plants carried out by POSCO were completed in 2012
and 2016. Likewise, the consortium Korea Airports Corp. (KAC) is involved in
the construction of the Chincheros International Airport from 2019.
And finally, in the food industry sector, the only
Korean company in this area is Freeko Peru S.A., which was established in 1997,
and stands out for being one of the largest packers of frozen pre-cooked fish
and shellfish, and it operates in the Paita Special Development Zone in the
Piura region.
Korean investment stock in Peru between 1994 and 2021
accounted for around 3.5 billion dollars, according to the data published by
the Korea Export Import Bank.
Future expectations and implication
Regarding the evolution of trade between Peru and Korea, imports from
Korea would continue to decrease, not only because less Korean goods would be
bought from Korea itself (but bought from other countries where Korean
companies are established) but also because there are goods from China
competing very strongly, in fields like automobiles, electronic, mobile phones.
Chinese goods are cheap and increasingly of better quality. As Korean goods
before replaced Japanese goods, now Chinese goods are replacing Korean goods.
One reason for expecting that imports from Korea will decrease in spite
of a FTA can be seen from the fact that in the case of Peru trade with Japan, a
country with which Peru signed a FTA that went in force in 2012, imports from
Japan also fell in 2021 compared with the level of 2012. In the case of Japan
imports fell from a level of 1.5 billion dollars in 2012 to 957 million dollars
in 2021. Many Japanese goods in Peru are imported not from Japan but from
Brazil or Mexico, in automobiles for example, or from China, in the case of TV
sets. Also, because Japanese goods are competing with ones from Korea and
China.
Regarding Peruvian exports, there is a potential for increasing Peru
exports of agricultural goods to Korea, specially of fruits and vegetables.
Peru has become a big player in the international market for those goods. For
example, Peru now is the biggest exporter of berries, of grapes, in the world,
and the second of avocados and asparagus. One problem for increasing the
exports of agricultural goods to Korea is that this country has very strict
phytosanitary requirements and takes a long time to give approval to imports.
Peru has also potential to increase exports of fishery goods, as its
shares a long coastline of Pacific Ocean with rich marine resources. More
investment in this field will be necessary to exploit these resources. Also,
Peru territory is nearly 50% of Amazon area and there is plenty of wood there,
but not enough transport means exists to bring these goods to the ports in the
coast and export them (and to process the wood and create a wood industry).
Investment from Korea could increase more because Peru has plenty of
natural resources, like minerals, oil and natural gas, and lithium, but
probably a more stable political and social situation in the country is needed
for foreign investment to exploit these resources. Also, the manufacturing
sector could attract investment as Peru is signatory to many FTAs that would
allow access to many markets for the products made in the country, but again a
more stable situation and policies to promotes this sector will be needed.
Perhaps if Korea become a member of the Pacific Alliance, which Peru is a
member with Mexico, Chile, and Colombia, a biggest common market will make Peru
a more attractive place for Korea investment.
*Carlos Aquino is Director of the Asia Studies Centre at San Marcos
National University, and Maria Osterloh is a professor and researcher in the
Centre.
[1] See International Trade Centre,
Trade Map: List of supplying markets for the product imported by Korea,
Republic of in 2021
Product:
08 Edible fruit and nuts; peel of citrus fruit or melons https://www.trademap.org/Country_SelProductCountry.aspx?nvpm=1%7c410%7c%7c%7c%7c08%7c%7c%7c2%7c1%7c1%7c1%7c1%7c1%7c2%7c1%7c1%7c1
[2] Source: data from SUNAT, consulta
por importador / exportador http://www.aduanet.gob.pe/cl-ad-itconsultadwh/ieITS01Alias?accion=consultar&CG_consulta=1
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