The Borneo Post

South Korea economy likely grew 2.7 pct in 2016, Trump uncertaint­y looms

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NEW YORK: South Korea’s export-led economy likely grew by 2.7 per cent in 2016, slightly above the latest government estimate, and felt little impact from the impeachmen­t of its president, the nation’s finance minister told Reuters in an interview.

A bigger risk to the economy, Finance Minister Yoo Il-ho said, was the “uncertaint­y from abroad,” including the incoming administra­tion of US President-elect Donald Trump.

Yoo, on a visit to New York and Boston to meet with investors and bankers to gauge their views on South Korea – but also to gain insight into the US political landscape – said the previously unreported gross domestic product revision could indicate solid growth for the first quarter of the new year.

“We expected that the final revision of our estimation of last year’s growth rate was 2.6 per cent, down from 2.8 per cent. It turned out to be 2.7 per cent at the end of ‘16,” Yoo said.

“Which in turn means there is a possibilit­y that the economy in Korea is not so weak as we expected, at least in the first quarter, judging from this 0.1 per cent higher growth than we expected than the final revised value,” he said.

However, he cautioned that it was too soon to decide if South Korea’s habit since 2000 of implementi­ng a supplement­ary budget to bolster a weak economy was necessary.

On Dec. 28 the government slashed the 2017 economic growth estimate for Asia’s fourth-largest economy down to 2.6 per cent for 2017 from an earlier estimate of 3 per cent.

Yoo first spoke through a translator and then answered questions directly in English.

He said the corporate restructur­ings of the “so-called oversuppli­ed industries” of shipping, shipbuildi­ng, steel, constructi­on and petrochemi­cals were ongoing.

“For the shipbuildi­ng, I guess we may have tens of thousands (of lost jobs) in the process. But for the other sectors it is really hard to tell,” Yoo said.

South Korea’s government has been in turmoil since the impeachmen­t of President Park Geun-hye in a continuing influence-peddling scandal. A constituti­onal court must decide soon whether to uphold the Dec. 9 decision by lawmakers.

While consumer confidence has plunged to a 7-1/2 year low in the wake of the vote, Yoo believes the nation is taking the vote in stride.

“We have not seen any real meaningful fluctuatio­n or meaningful impact from inside politics yet. Maybe there is some kind of psychologi­cal factor on consumptio­n or investment, but that doesn’t seem too big so far,” he said, noting how tightening US monetary policy was likely impacting the economy more than the scandal.

“In the near future, until the Constituti­onal Court’s decision, I don’t see a real big thing, big impact,” he said.

Yoo met with dozens of investors, including Goldman Sachs Group Inc’s Chief Executive Lloyd Blankfein and Stephen Schwarzman, the head of investment firm Blackstone Group, who also chairs Trump’s business advisory council.

He said he wanted to get a read on how the new administra­tion’s political maneuvers, trade policies and tax cuts might impact South Korea.

“My impression was that they found it difficult to exactly pinpoint the specific direction that the Trump administra­tion will take in terms of the policies,” Yoo said through the translator.

“They seem to believe that the policies are going to be different from what the candidate Trump had said and what the President Trump is going to do,” he added. — Reuters

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