
Israel favours upgrading US free trade deal, economy minister says
JERUSALEM, April 28 (Reuters) - Israel has proposed revamping its four-decade-old free trade agreement with the United States, its economy minister said on Monday, as it looks to head off tariffs from its closest ally.
An upgraded trade pact would ease restrictions on data sharing that would enable significant collaboration, Economy Minister Nir Barkat told Reuters at a conference in Jerusalem.
He said Israel had already agreed to several requests, which included lifting tariffs on U.S. agricultural goods.
Most U.S. goods are already exempt from Israeli tariffs under a 1985 trade deal. The U.S. is Israel's biggest trading partner with bilateral trade worth an estimated $37 billion in 2024, according to U.S. trade data. Last year, Israel had a $7.4 billion trade surplus with the United States.
President Donald Trump's administration this month announced sweeping tariffs on dozens of countries, including a 17% levy on Israeli imports, before saying there would be a 90-day pause with a baseline 10% tariff on imports to allow for trade negotiations.
Prior to the sweeping tariffs announcement, Israel said it would lift all remaining import duties on U.S. goods and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with Trump in Washington.

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