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S.Korea’s 2022 inflation may accelerate to 11-year peak


Link [2022-02-04 12:52:41]



Customers examine vegetables at a hypermarket in Seoul South Korea’s inflation this year is expected to accelerate to an 11-year high, adding to expectations of further interest rate hikes later this year, as consumer prices in Asia’s fourth-largest economy continued to rise more than the central bank’s forecast.Consumer prices rose 3.6% in January from a year earlier, a notch lower than a 3.8% decade peak in November 2021, government data on Friday. The inflation stayed above the 3% level for a fourth straight month.Higher prices of raw materials such as crude oil and global supply chain disruptions put upward pressure on consumer inflation. Petroleum product prices jumped 16.4%, while the cost of agricultural, livestock and fisheries grew 6.3%.Core inflation, the change in the costs of goods and services excluding food and energy, stood at 3% last month, the highest since January 2012.The Bank of Korea projected annual headline inflation in 2022 to be higher than mid-2%.Experts, however, expected the annual inflation to rise to around 3% this year, the highest since 2011 when consumer prices surged 4%. The average consumer inflation rate for 2021 was at a decade high of 2.5%.“The inflation is predicted to stay high in the first half, given a base effect, while the rise is unlikely to significantly slow down in the second because of (high) import costs and raw material prices,” said Kim Sang-bong, an economics professor at Hansung University in Seoul, forecasting the annual inflation at high-2% or even 3% this year.Yonsei University’s economics professor Sung Tae-yoon expected the rise in prices to accelerate further if rate hikes in developed economies are delayed, saying “inflation is predicted to stay around 3% for the time being, given the sustained global supply issue on the ongoing US-China tensions.”GLOBAL TIGHTENINGCentral banks worldwide already tightened monetary policies, absorbing liquidity.The US Federal Reserves plans a rate hike in March and quantitative tightening in the second half, while the Bank of England raised interest rates on Thursday and in December last year. The European Central Bank is likely to wind down bond purchases.South Korea’s central bank already increased borrowing costs back to a pre-pandemic level, by raising the base interest rate in August and November last year, as well as January this year. Bank of Korea Governor Lee Ju-yeol The Bank of Korea is expected to hike the rates further to curb rising inflationary pressure and household debt.The government is also considering various measures to stem inflation including an extension of fuel tax cuts.“We will come up with steps to ensure a stable supply of raw materials such as expanding rare metal reserves, raising inventory target for each non-ferrous metal, increasing key grains stockpiles and securing overseas grain supply networks,” said First Vice Finance Minister Lee Eog-weon. “In particular, we will closely monitor global oil prices and consider an extension of fuel tax cuts, following the trend.”By So-Hyeon Kim and Ik-Hwan Kimalpha@hankyung.comJongwoo Cheon edited this article.



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