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South Korean economy faces mounting problems
By John Chan
24 July 2008
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There are signs of growing economic trouble in South Korea.
The country, which is currently the worlds 13th largest
economy, is particularly vulnerable to the global economic turbulence.
The financial shocks that began with the subprime mortgage crisis
in the US loans last year, combined with global inflationary pressures,
caught South Korea unprepared.
News of the bailout of the US mortgage giantsFannie Mae
and Freddie Machit South Korea hard, with its share market
plunging to a low for the year of 1,489.86 points. Economists
and investors expressed concerns that South Korea may confront
a combination of economic downturn, asset deflation, rising interest
rates and inflation.
South Korea was in the midst of an aggressive expansion of
bank lending when the international credit crunch hit in 2007.
Small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and households are heavily
indebted. Bank loans to SMEs stood at 398.9 trillion won ($US394.1
billion) in May, up 28.9 trillion won from December, while the
overdue rate has increased to 1.3 percent in March, up from 1
percent in December.
Household debt has been growing even faster than the US. The
total grew by 210 percent from 2001-2006, compared with 190 percent
in the US for the same period. Total home mortgages reached 229
trillion won ($226.25 billion) in June, up 35.5 percent from 169
trillion won ($166.9 billion) at the end of 2004.
Although the housing prices in South Korea have not experienced
a dramatic decline, rising mortgage interest ratesup 0.25
percent from Aprilare placing millions of families under
enormous stress and raising the prospect of US-style home foreclosures.
An unnamed Bank of Korea (BOK) official told the Korea Times
on July 16 that it was still too early to talk about asset deflation.
However, if asset values drop by an additional 20 to 30
percent, chances are that the country will face another credit
crisis, he said.
Andy Xie, former chief Asia economist with Morgan Stanley,
pointed out that South Korea is vulnerable to stagflationeconomic
slowdown combined with rising prices. Korea may be experiencing
a massive property bubble funded by debt. A decline of asset values
and a rise of the consumer price index (CPI) are a deadly combination.
The countrys top business lobby, the Federation of Korean
Industries (FKI), which is composed of major conglomerates such
as Samsung and Hyundai, issued a statement on July 16 declaring
that the South Korean economy has already entered a period
of stagflation. Federation chairman Cho Suck-rai said: At
this point, the government has little room to manoeuvre to overcome
current economic difficulties.
The statement followed an emergency meeting of the FKI board.
It passed a Resolution to Boost the Nations Economy,
which stated: We agreed that we should not sit idle while
seeing the economy collapse. The 30 largest Korean corporations
have agreed to spend 94.5 trillion won or $94 billion this year
to stimulate the economy, up more than 25 percent from 2007. They
also plan to create 39,000 jobs in the second half of the year,
in addition to the 42,000 in the first half.
The statement came after the release of economic data for May
by the National Statistical Office on July 7, which pointed to
decreasing investment and dwindling production as well as weakening
domestic demand. Mining and industrial production fell by 0.6
percent from April to May. Consumer sales shrank by 0.6 percent.
Capital expenditure, a key indicator of business confidence, has
fallen in four out of the five months from January to May.
The Chosun Ilbo pointed out that May, which has several
public holidays, is traditionally a month with high demand for
consumer goods. But this year, sales of durable goods such as
cars, computers, telecom devices and furniture decreased by 2.2
percent compared to April, with semi-durable goods such as clothes
and shoes down by 0.2 percent.
The consumption trends show that consumers spent only
on essentials and refrained from spending on items that were not
urgently needed. Yoo Byung-kyu, a director of the Hyundai
Economic Research Institute told Chosun Ilbo: As
the business outlook is seen as negative by businesses, apprehension
took its toll and firms are unable to decide on what and when
to invest.
Official statistics released on July 10 shows the consumer
evaluation index in June at 61.3 (compared to a benchmark of 100).
The indicator is based on a survey in which respondents are asked
if their living standards have worsened compared to six months
ago. The June figure is the lowest since September 2003just
before the credit card crisis that saw millions of people go into
default. Inflation in June was 5.5 percentthe highest in
more than nine years.
The administration of President Lee Myung-bak has been trying
to downplay economic fears. On July 3, Finance Minister Kang Man-soo
insisted there is no stagflation in South Korea, but has admitted
that the economy may be heading in that direction.
However, Kang has been under mounting pressure to resign because
of his policy of allowing the won to fall in value alongside the
US dollar in a bid to keep the countrys export prices competitive.
His weak currency policy has been criticised for stoking inflation
via high prices for imported raw materials, especially oil. South
Korea recorded its first trade deficit in 11 years in June due
to soaring oil prices, which cost an estimated record of $10 billion.
The combination of rising prices and a slowing economy has
created a dilemma for the central bank. After much speculation
of rate hikes to curb inflation, the BOK decided on July 10 to
hold the rate unchanged at 5 percent for the 11th month in a row.
BOK chief Lee Seong-tae told reporters: [D]ecision-making
is becoming more difficult with high inflation coinciding with
an economic slowdown. Lee warned in particular against the
demands for wage rises: We are concerned about the secondary
effect of rising inflation, such as a wage price spiral, in which
inflation may creep into wages and increase inflation expectation.
Declining living standards and inflation have propelled hundreds
of thousands into the streets in recent weeks. While opposition
to US beef imports and concern about mad cow disease has been
a trigger, the extent of the movement points to broader concerns
about economic uncertainty, declining living standards, price
rises and job losses. A wave of strikes by truck drivers over
high fuel prices has rocked South Korea in recent weeks.
President Lee was forced to carry out a cabinet reshuffle on
July 7 to try to stem the mass protests over US beef imports.
All ministers tendered their resignations and three were replaced.
Lee, from the right-wing Grand National Party, won the presidential
election last year by capitalising on widespread discontent over
the state of the economy. His grand plan, known as 747,
promised 7 percent annual growth rate, doubling per capita income
to $40,000 and making South Korea the worlds seventh largest
economy.
Since his installation in February, Lees program has
quickly fallen apart. The latest government estimate for the growth
rate is now in the upper 4 percent range. However, Finance Minister
Kang Man-soo admitted recently that if the oil price hits $170
a barrel, the growth rate might slip to 3 percent and inflation
rise to 6 percent. Seoul is preparing to enforce emergency energy
conservation measures if oil prices reach $150.
Earlier this month, Seoul decided to strengthen the won by
intervening into the currency market. At one point, the won hit
993 against the greenback on July 9from 1004.9 the previous
daythe biggest jump since the October 1998. The government
is believed to have sold $10 billion from its foreign currency
reserves. International financial institutions, however, have
put a big question mark over the governments measures, due
to the weakening US dollar and rising oil prices. Standard &
Poors declared that such measures could not halt the decline
of the won in the long term. Morgan Stanley predicted the intervention
would ultimately fail.
Foreign investors are losing confidence over the South Korean
economy, selling off 17.4 trillion won in shares this yearthe
highest sales level since the Seoul stock exchange was opened
to foreigners in 1992. Foreign stock holdings have fallen from
44 percent of the domestic capital market in 2004, to 31.35 percent.
A major concern among foreign investors is political instability.
The Wall Street Journal wrote on July 7: Its
unclear how much longer the [anti-US beef] movement will sustain
momentum, as sentiment rises that the protests may be distracting
the government from addressing major economic problems.
South Korean investment overseas has also been suffering, the
Chosun Ilbo reported on July 15. Fuelled by a flood of
cheap credit, South Korean investors last year bought $52.4 billion
in foreign stocka more than threefold increase from 2006.
By the end of 2007, South Korea held $116.6 billion in foreign
funds, including bonds, with returns of 9 trillion won. This year,
however, amid global financial turmoil, losses are estimated to
be close at 12 trillion won. Last years profits have been
wiped out and the value of investments is dwindling.
South Korea is highly exposed to global economic changes because
of its dependence on exports of manufactured goods to Western
markets, and imports of raw materials. It is the worlds
fifth largest importer of oil and also buys large quantities of
iron ore, coal and other minerals. Weakening demand in the US
and Europe is having a major impact on Korean exporters. In the
first half of this year, South Koreas trade surplus with
the US fell by 38.3 percent from the same period last year to
just $2.8 billion. Exports to China, now South Koreas largest
trade partner, continue to increase, but China is rapidly becoming
an economic competitor to South Korea.
South Korean corporations confront a difficult dilemma: squeezed
on the one side by Japanese, European and American rivals who
currently hold an advantage in advanced technology, and on the
other by emerging economies, particularly China, which is increasingly
involved in the manufacture of more sophisticated products including
electronics and cars. South Korean firms, particularly in labour
intensive industries, are increasingly looking for cheap labour
in South East Asia and also in North Korea, which only compounds
the social crisis at home. The fact that South Korea is no longer
seen as an attractive manufacturing platform is indicated by the
decline in foreign direct investment (FDI) over the past three
yearsits OECD ranking for FDI has plunged from 16th in 2004
to 29th last yearalmost at the bottom.
The latest data indicates that these broader processes are
producing a major economic crisis, which will intensify the countrys
political and social turmoil.
See Also:
Another huge demonstration demands South
Korean presidents resignation
[8 July 2008]
South Korean government turns to repression
to curb protests
[3 July 2008]
South Korean government tries
to stem protests against US beef imports
[24 June 2008]
South Korean government besieged
by demonstrations and strikes
[14 June 2008]
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