South Korea’s Economy Contracts as Exports Fall, Rates Rise

(Bloomberg) — South Korea’s economy shrank for the first time since the beginning of the pandemic last quarter as exports fell and consumer spending edged down in response to rising interest rates.

(Bloomberg) — South Korea’s economy shrank for the first time since the beginning of the pandemic last quarter as exports fell and consumer spending edged down in response to rising interest rates.

Gross domestic product contracted 0.4% from the previous three months, the Bank of Korea said Thursday, matching a Bloomberg survey of economists. From a year earlier, the economy still expanded by 1.4%.

Bank of Korea Governor Rhee Chang-yong had flagged the possibility of a contraction earlier this month when he delivered a quarter percentage-point interest rate increase. Recent weakness in economic activity prompted markets to interpret the hike as the final move in the current tightening cycle.

For 2022 as a whole, the economy expanded 2.6% from a year earlier, in line with an earlier BOK projection.

Korea serves as an early indicator of the state of the global economy as it depends heavily on international trade. The nation’s performance is closely bound up with that of major economies including China, the US and Japan.

Korea is also vulnerable to fluctuations in global commodity prices as it relies heavily on imports of oil and food. As rates climbed worldwide, companies reined in investment, reducing demand for Korean products such as semiconductors, steel and displays.

An economic slowdown in China particularly hurt Korean exports last year. Policymakers are also concerned about the potential impact of growing US curbs on China over semiconductor exports, given Korea has large chipmaking facilities in the world’s second-largest economy.

“Exports and their impact on Korea’s growth are top of mind for policymakers,” Duncan Wrigley, an economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said after early trade data showed an ongoing decline in overseas shipments last week.

“Korean exports will likely remain on a downward trend given the poor economic prospects in its major markets.”

While trade is in a downturn, consumption is weakening in Korea, especially after an October crowd-crush tragedy that killed more than 150 people in Seoul. 

Household spending had been a key driver of economic growth for most of last year following the relaxation of virus regulations. 

For this year, Korea’s economy is expected to grow slightly less than 1.7%, according to the central bank. Inflation is seen reaching around 3.6%, it estimates.

As the outlook darkens, the BOK is winding down its 18-month tightening cycle. The central bank’s hikes included two half-point moves last year as it sought to keep pace with the Federal Reserve’s aggressive tightening.

Higher rates have strained Korea’s credit markets and a rare default by the local developer of Legoland Korea sent the corporate bond market tumbling last year. Deteriorating sentiment in property markets as house prices fall is another concern for policymakers.

The economy is more likely to return to growth in the current quarter than shrink as China regains momentum following the end of its Covid lockdowns, according to Rhee.

“Whilst we see a tailwind, a quick reversal of exports is unlikely,” Bank of America economists Kathleen Oh and Ting Him Ho wrote before the release. “What Korea needs eventually is China’s final external demand pickup to strongly benefit Korea intermediary goods exports.”

(Adds outlook for first quarter and charts)

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