Borrowing in S Korea
Source: http://southkoreaeconomy.blogspot.com/2007/08/borrowing-in-s-korea.htmlPosted on Wednesday, August 8th, 2007 | In Korea
In Bloomberg today:
South Korea’s Household Debt Grows at Fastest Pace in 5 Months
By Kim Kyoungwha
Aug. 8 (Bloomberg) — South Korea’s household debt grew at the fastest pace in five months in July, increasing pressure on the central bank to raise interest rates for a second time this year.
Lending by commercial banks to households surged 1.77 trillion won ($1.9 billion) from the previous month, the biggest rise since February, the Bank of Korea said in Seoul today. The gain was more than double a 776 billion won increase in June.
A resurgence in household borrowing may persuade central bank Governor Lee Seong Tae and his board to increase the benchmark interest rate from a six-year high. Policy makers raised the key rate to 4.75 percent last month on concern a jump in lending may spur inflation as economic growth accelerates.
Lee and his policy makers meet at 9 a.m. in Seoul tomorrow and an interest-rate decision is due before 11 a.m.
All 14 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News expect the bank will leave the rate at 4.75 percent. Still, nine of 14 analysts see a quarter-point increase to 5 percent later this year.
Lending to small and mid-sized businesses rose by 3.1 trillion won in July, slowing from June’s 8.1 trillion won gain, which was the biggest monthly increase since the bank began compiling the figures in December 2000.
Mortgage lending advanced 127.4 billion in July, after climbing 710 billion won in June, today’s report showed.
Lee and Finance Minister Kwon Okyu say that excessive lending and money-supply growth could push up prices and result in an asset bubble, undermining the economy’s longest expansion in a decade.
In an effort to slow borrowing, the central bank on June 21 reduced the funds it makes available for loans to small businesses for the first time in six months. Last year, the bank ordered commercial lenders to hold more money as reserves.
Lf, the broadest measure of the money supply and formerly known as M3, rose an estimated 10.4 percent in June from May, the central bank said, citing preliminary figures. Lf stands for liquidity of financial institutions.
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Bank, Bank of Korea, bloomberg, central bank, Kim Kyoungwha, Korea, Kwon Okyu, Lee Seong, Lee Seong Tae, Seoul, south korea, USD
![]() About Claus Vistesen (http://clausvistesen.squarespace.com/)
Claus Vistesen is a 23 year old macroeconomist on the verge of finishing his MSc in Applied Economics and Finance from the Copenhagen Business School. His primary research interests are international finance and international macroeconomics, especially, the changing structure of global and national demographics. Claus takes an interest in the econometrics discipline which he intends to dig deeper into post graduate. He primarily writes out of his own blog Alpha.Sources as well as Global Economy Matters. He liaises closely with his colleague and friend Edward Hugh whom he develops and produces research material and articles with. In terms of specific topics Claus tracks the European economies as well as Japan as his main areas of focus. Claus has been online with Alpha.Sources since September 2005 and has realized how a serious online presence can be an asset in terms of academic work as well as on a personal relationship level. He is grateful for the reactions, opinions, and contacts he has received through this site. The interaction between macroeconomics and demographics is a strong anchor in what goes on at Alpha.Sources, and his work in general. In the end, Alpha.Sources represents a way for Claus to conceptualize his thoughts and views on the surrounding world, so no boxes and boundaries can be set on the content. |



