Business

S. Korea raises interest rate to tame inflation, support won

Central bank lifts borrowing costs to 3% in fifth consecutive hike 

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 12 Oct 2022 1:00PM

S. Korea raises interest rate to tame inflation, support won
The Bank of Korea has lifted borrowing costs to 3%, the highest since 2012, to tame inflation and support its plunging currency. – AFP pic, October 12, 2022

SEOUL – South Korea’s central bank today hikes its key interest rate by half a percentage point to a decade-high as it tries to tackle surging inflation and support the plunging won.

The Bank of Korea lifted borrowing costs to 3% – the highest since 2012 – marking the latest in a series of increases since last year, when they were at rock bottom to fight the impact of the pandemic.

“Additional inflationary pressures and the risks to the foreign exchange sector have increased, affected by the rising Korean won to US dollar exchange rate, while inflation has remained high,” the central bank said in a press release.

The latest decision comes as Asia’s fourth-largest economy recovers from a Covid-19-induced slowdown with a rebound in demand – although it is now struggling with rising fuel and raw material prices.

It is the bank’s fifth consecutive hike, and a return to a faster pace of tightening, after a quarter-point raise in August, highlighting efforts to support the won, which is at a 13-year low.

The won depreciation is making inflation worse in Korea, which is heavily reliant on energy imports.

South Korea’s consumer prices jumped 5.6% year-on-year in September, fuelled by accelerating costs for personal services and processed food products.

The central bank said domestic economic growth is expected to slow gradually, affected by the global slowdown and the increase in interest rates.

“The Board sees continued rate hikes as warranted, as inflation is expected to remain high,” it added.

Led by the US Federal Reserve, central banks around the world have launched a series of rate increases as Russia’s war in Ukraine has led to a surge in energy and food prices that has driven up inflation.

The International Monetary Fund cut its 2023 global growth forecast to 2.7% and trimmed its outlook for South Korea next year to 2% from 2.1%. – AFP, October 12, 2022

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