Central bank

August inflation puts BOK under fire for delayed pivot

Kyung-Min Kang and Jin-Gyu Kang

4 HOURS AGO


South Korea’s inflation moderated to the government’s target of 2.0% in August, its slowest pace of increase in three years and five months, putting greater pressure on the Bank of Korea to pivot toward monetary easing before it is too late.

The August inflation bolstered the criticism that the central bank might have missed a right time to slash interest rates, with the presidential office and the ruling People Power Party recommending the BOK lower the policy rate to revive domestic demand.

Last month, the BOK kept interest rates unchanged at 3.50% for a 13th straight month in a row.

Tamed inflation has reinforced expectations for a pivot toward monetary loosening. But soaring household debts that leapt to a record high in the second quarter of this year and rising home prices outweighed decelerating inflation for the rate decision.

After the August monetary policy meeting, its governor Rhee Chang-yong hinted at an interest rate cut as early as next month, citing the downward trend in inflation.

(Graphics by Dongbeom Yun)


August’s inflation reading of 2.0% marked its slowest pace of year-on-year increase since recording 1.9% in March 2021 and followed a 2.6% gain in July, according to the Statistics Korea.

It remained below the 3% level for the fifth straight month in a row thanks to a fall in crude oil prices and stable agricultural prices.

The core inflation, excluding volatile food and energy prices, eased to 2.1% in August, versus a 2.2% advance the month prior.

Bank of Korea Governor Rhee Chang-yong

The Ministry of Economy and Finance predicts the country’s inflation to hover at the low end of 2% throughout the remainder of this year.

But the rapid household debt growth poses a dilemma for the BOK before shifting to monetary easing. It is understood to prioritize housing prices and debts over domestic demand to make a rate move.

Home prices, particularly in the Seoul Metropolitan Area, have recovered, or surpassed pre-pandemic levels.

(Graphics by Dongbeom Yun)


To cool the housing market, domestic banks have hiked mortgage rates, going against market expectations of imminent rate cuts. But it failed to reverse the borrowing spree by home buyers. 

Under growing pressure to curb mortgage loan growth from financial regulators, banks have taken additional steps to tighten lending: reducing the maximum term on mortgage loans and setting limits on home-secured personal loans.   

RATE CUTS IN OCTOBER?

Market consensus is the BOK will make its first rate cut in more than a year in October. It will skip a monetary policy meeting this month, where the Korean Thanksiving Chuseok holiday falls on.

The presidential office and the ruling People Power Party are adding pressure to the central bank to trim interest rates. They recently deliver their rare public comments about monetary policy, saying that interest rate cuts would be the only policy tool to shore up the economy at this point in time.

Write to Kyung-Min Kang and Jin-Gyu Kang at Kkm1026@hankyung.com
 

Yeonhee Kim edited this article

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