The Korea Times

Korean economy entering ‘5%-5%’ depressing phase

High jobless rate, rising interest rate overshadow economy

- By Yoon Ja-young yjy@ktimes.com

Whenever the economic situation in the United States improved, Korea used to enjoy a trickle-down effect as it was closely related with the world’s largest economy.

However, the two are showing signs of decoupling as Korean economic indices are turning for the worse while those in the U.S. are improving.

Most notable is the jobless rate. The country’s jobless rate reached 5 percent in February, with the number of the unemployed totaling 1.34 million.

Ongoing corporate restructur­ing, which has shed jobs in the manufactur­ing sector, coupled with a prolonged economic slowdown, pushed the jobless figure to the highest level since the Asian financial crisis.

The 5 percent unemployme­nt rate is higher than that of the United States, which stood at 4.7 percent in February on an improving economy. This is the first time since 2001 for Korea’s unemployme­nt figure to be higher than that of the U.S.

Due to poor job market conditions, many are left with no other option but to earn a living through self-employment. The number of self-employed people increased by 213,000 last month, and the majority of them started businesses without any employees.

“With employment decreasing in the private sector, job figures are increasing only in the self-employed sector where the entry barrier is low,” said Bin Hyun-joon, the director in charge of employment at Statistics Korea.

The increasing number of the self-employed is adding to concern over household debt as many start their businesses by taking out loans.

According to a report by the central bank, the possibilit­y of a self-employed person closing down their business rises by up to 10.6 percent when the lending rate rises by 0.1 of a percentage point, as most of them start their business using large loans.

Following the United States’ key rate hike, the country’s lending rate is accelerati­ng despite a freeze by the Bank of Korea (BOK).

The U.S. Fed raised its benchmark rate March 15 with analysts expecting a series of hikes to follow until 2019. It will rise to over 2 percent next year, reaching 3 percent in 2019.

While analysts in Seoul expect the BOK to avoid raising its key rate this year despite concerns over capital flight, the U.S. hike is already affecting the lending rate here.

Mortgage rates offered by major local banks rose steeply to around 4.5 percent recently, and are soon expected to surpass 5 percent. The interest rate on credit loans offered at savings banks averaged 22.88 percent in January, rising 0.5 percentage points in just one month. The central bank estimates that a 1 percentage point rise in the lending rate will increase the annual interest burden on households by 9 trillion won.

Despite a gloomy economic outlook, the stock market has been performing well, on ample liquidity, active foreign buying and robust Samsung Electronic­s shares.

But analysts say this doesn’t necessaril­y reflect the real economy.

“To be more concrete, the KOSPI has improved but not the KOSDAQ,” said Park Sang-hyun, the chief economist at Hi Investment and Securities.

The country’s exports have been rebounding since last November while domestic consumptio­n has lost steam. The KOSPI closed at 2164.58 Friday, up 14.5 points from the previous day.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Korea, Republic