South Korea expects inflation to slow this month after consumer prices rose faster than expected in September due to higher energy and food costs, a result that reinforced the case for authorities to keep policy settings restrictive for longer.
(Bloomberg) — South Korea expects inflation to slow this month after consumer prices rose faster than expected in September due to higher energy and food costs, a result that reinforced the case for authorities to keep policy settings restrictive for longer.
The central bank said Thursday that inflationary pressure would slow from October after consumer prices advanced 3.7% last month from a year earlier, a quicker pace than the 3.4% recorded in August. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg had expected the rate to speed up to 3.5%.
The inflation rate will likely be around 3% by the end of the year, the Bank of Korea said in a statement. Finance Minister Choo Kyung-ho echoed that view in comments released separately, pointing to core inflation staying in the low 3% range.
The Bank of Korea is keeping a close eye on inflation as it maintains its benchmark interest rate at a restrictive level of 3.5% to tamp down price pressures. Inflation briefly cooled to levels below 3% at the start of the summer before a resurgence in August.
The BOK meets later this month to determine whether it will continue to hold rates, as it has done since January, or resume hiking. All board members have said they’re open to raising the rate by another quarter percentage point if needed, a stance that is largely in line with the views of global central bankers looking to stay alert against a renewed flare-up in prices.
The bank has held policy steady since its first meeting this year, after earlier leading the pack of monetary authorities tightening policy in the early stages of the recovery from the pandemic. It started its rate-hike cycle in August 2021.
The latest inflation reading adds pressure on the BOK to resume raising the rate further, especially at a time when there’s persistent talk of more tightening in the US, said Lim Dong-min, an independent economist who previously worked with Kyobo Securities.
“Korea isn’t free from inflation, either,” he said. “It’s too early to feel safe.”
Since January the BOK has been reluctant to raise rates given the fragility of an economy hit by weaker external demand. The risk that a deeper property-market correction could also weigh on economic growth is another factor making it harder for the bank to tighten policy further.
At the same time, a pick-up in household borrowing in recent months is making policymakers cautious about any policy loosening.
What Bloomberg Economics Says…
“We think the BOK’s best option for now is to hold the policy rate tight for an extended period. Inflation risks are elevated, household debt levels are excessive and expectations of higher US interest rates are putting pressure on the won. But weak growth and worries about financial instability stemming from a shaky property market will keep further hikes off the table.”
-Hyosung Kwon, economist
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(Recasts with comments from Bank of Korea)
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