SOUTH KOREA’S exports tumbled in August for a ninth consecutive month, on sluggish demand from its biggest buyer, China, and depressed prices of computer chips globally, government data showed yesterday. The bleak data clouded the outlook for Asia’s fourth largest economy as a brewing trade dispute with Japan emerged as a new risk to the export-dependent economy on top of the conflicts between China and the United States. Exports in August plunged 13.6 percent from a year earlier, the country’s trade ministry data showed, exactly matching a median 13.6 percent fall forecast in a recent survey and marking the third month with a double-digit rate of drop in exports. That further dented growth prospects for South Korea and strengthened the case for an additional policy easing by the central bank, soon after a surprise interest rate cut in July, for the first time in three years. “There’s no sign of the export momentum gaining strength as the Sino-U.S. trade dispute continued while Japan’s export curbs,” said Lee Sang-jae, an economist at Eugene Investment and Securities. South Korea is the first major exporting economy to report foreign trade data each month and its companies include some of the world’s top suppliers of chips, smartphones, cars and ships, so providing an early guide to the health of the global economy. The finance minister also said yesterday South Korea was now likely to miss this year’s growth target, just two months after the government downgraded the goal to 2.4-2.5 percent from 2.6-2.7 percent earlier. The sluggish exports in August were led by a 30.7 percent drop in shipments of semiconductor chips that account for a fifth of the total, while a decline of 21.3 percent in sales to neighboring China also contributed, the ministry data showed. The ministry said in a statement exports, excluding semiconductors, contracted 8.7 percent year on year. Disputes with Japan were hardly a welcome development, although the effect has been negligible. Japan has tightened curbs on exports of high-tech materials to South Korea, and each has stripped the other of fast-track export status. Imports in August fell 4.2 percent from a year earlier, largely in line with a prediction of a 4 percent drop in the recent survey. That brought this month’s trade surplus to US$1.72 billion, compared with a US$2.40 billion surplus in July. The data came days after the central bank held its policy interest rate unchanged at 1.50 percent Friday after a 25-basis-point cut in July, while keeping the door open for another reduction. It next reviews its policy Oct. 16. South Korea’s economy grew 1.9 percent during the first half of the year in annual terms and private sector organizations predict full-year growth will fall to as low as 1.4 percent from 2.7 percent last year, one of the worst figures in decades. On Thursday, the government proposed for next year the most aggressive budget spending plan since the 2008-2009 global financial crisis. (SD-Agencies) |