Inflation trend now sufficient to consider rate cut: BOK governor

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Inflation trend now sufficient to consider rate cut: BOK governor

  • 기자 사진
  • SHIN HA-NEE
Bank of Korea (BOK) Gov. Rhee Chang-yong, center in the front row, poses for a photo with attendees of the 2024 Global Economy & Financial Stability Conference held in central Seoul on Tuesday. [BOK]

Bank of Korea (BOK) Gov. Rhee Chang-yong, center in the front row, poses for a photo with attendees of the 2024 Global Economy & Financial Stability Conference held in central Seoul on Tuesday. [BOK]

 
Korea’s top central banker said that the current inflation situation, with the rise in consumer prices stabilizing at 2 percent, provides a sufficient basis for a rate cut.
 
“In terms of inflation, the time is sufficient to consider a rate cut,” Bank of Korea (BOK) Gov. Rhee Chang-yong told the press during the 2024 Global Economy & Financial Stability Conference. The two-day event hosted by the BOK, the Ministry of Economy and Finance and the Korea Development Institute was held in central Seoul on Tuesday.
 

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The governor added that the central bank “will assess the appropriate timing [for the rate cut decision] while taking other factors into account.”
 
In response to a question on whether it is safe to consider consumer prices to have fully stabilized, Rhee said, “Though it is not perfect yet, we expect at this point that [consumer prices] will move at the current level for several months unless there is a major shocks.”
 
Korea's consumer price index in August, announced earlier that day, rose 2 percent from a year earlier — the slowest increase since the 1.9 percent recorded in March 2021.
 
The BOK held the key interest rate at 3.50 percent for the 13th straight meeting on Aug. 22. During a press conference following the rate-setting meeting, Rhee said that “while the consumer price situation already constitutes sufficient grounds for a rate cut, we decided that the recent uptrend in household debt should be addressed now in order to prevent financial risks from reaching a more dangerous level.”
 
In August, the combined outstanding balance of household loans at the five commercial banks grew 9.6 trillion won ($7.2 billion) from a month prior to 725.4 trillion won, the steepest increase ever recorded.

BY SHIN HA-NEE [shin.hanee@joongang.co.kr]
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