Central banking
Korea’s record liquidity growth raises inflation, asset prices
Money supply increases 414 trillion won in 2021; liquidity is expected to grow further on extra budget, BOK
By Feb 17, 2022 (Gmt+09:00)
3
Min read
Most Read
LG Chem to sell water filter business to Glenwood PE for $692 million


Kyobo Life poised to buy Japan’s SBI Group-owned savings bank


KT&G eyes overseas M&A after rejecting activist fund's offer


StockX in merger talks with Naver’s online reseller Kream


Mirae Asset to be named Korea Post’s core real estate fund operator



South Korea’s money supply increased at the fastest pace in history last year, exceeding liquidity growth in the eurozone, which accelerated inflation in Asia’s fourth-largest economy and bolstered asset prices.
The country’s M2, a key gauge of the money supply, rose by a record 413.9 trillion won ($345.8 billion), or 12.9%, on-year to 3,613.7 trillion won in 2021, according to central bank data on Thursday.
M2 measures how much money is being circulated in the market. This includes cash, demand deposits, savings deposits, bank debentures and other short-term money that can easily be converted into cash.
The growth was higher than liquidity increases in the eurozone with a 7% rise, and other countries' such as Brazil, Sweden, Mexico, New Zealand and Russia. The US logged similar money supply growth of 12.9% as the Federal Reserve poured $120 billion into its reserves every month from January to November, keeping interest rates at zero.
ASSET PRICES, INFLATION
The Bank of Korea had held the base interest rate at an all-time low of 0.5%, boosting domestic liquidity, before it began raising the policy rate in August 2021. Low borrowing costs ramped up loans to invest in stocks and property markets, while households and smaller firms borrowed more for living expenses and operating costs due to COVID-19.
Household credit advanced 9.7% to 1,844.9 trillion won as of end-September 2021 with household debt to gross domestic product ratio at 106.5%, the highest since the first quarter of 2001 when the central bank started compiling such data.
In addition, the government spent 600 trillion won in total last year, up 50 trillion from 2020, to help households and smaller companies deal with COVID-19.
Increasing liquidity boosted asset markets. Retail investors bought a net 65.9 trillion won in stocks on the country’s main Kospi, while apartment prices in Seoul jumped 16.4%.

Consumer inflation accelerated to a decade high of 2.5% last year and soaring crude prices amid ongoing tensions over Ukraine and abundant liquidity are expected to speed up inflation to an 11-year high of around 3% in 2022.
A central bank policymaker said surging liquidity supply added to inflationary pressure.
“Considering the rapid growth in money supply in several countries, the recent surge in inflation is largely related to money moves,” said a member of the BOK’s monetary policy board, according to minutes from the central bank’s January meeting.
POLICY DILEMMA
Last month, the BOK raised interest rates back to a pre-pandemic level of 1.25%. The central bank is expected to ramp up the rate to up to 2% later this year as the Fed is predicted to increase borrowing costs and conduct quantitative tightening, in a process aimed at reducing the size of the central bank’s balance sheet.
But South Korea’s government plans to inject more money into the economy with a supplementary budget of 14 trillion won proposed in January to support small companies and the self-employed. Lawmakers wanted the government to raise the extra spending to as much as 46 trillion won ahead of the presidential election on March 9.
Once the government meets their requests to pump up more money, inflationary pressure is expected to further accelerate.
“A significant fiscal expansion may add to inflationary pressure,” said a member of the BOK’s monetary policy board in the central bank’s Jan. 14 meeting when the monetary authority increased the base interest rate by 25 basis points to 1.25%.
The BOK is caught in a dilemma, however, as it is simultaneously trying to curb rising market interest rates resulting from increased government spending.

Governor Lee Ju-yeol pledged to buy more government bonds after purchasing 2 trillion won in treasury bonds on Feb. 7, raising liquidity. That compared with the Fed’s plan to reduce the balance sheet in the second half, cutting money supply.
The government urged the BOK to buy more government bonds.
“We plan to continue policy cooperation to implement necessary measures such as the BOK’s additional purchases of government bonds in a timely manner,” said Second Vice Finance Minister Ahn Do-geol, addressing the recent treasury bond market.
Write to Ik-Hwan Kim at lovepen@hankyung.com
Jongwoo Cheon edited this article.
More to Read
-
Central bankingBOK’s mission impossible: To lower both inflation and govt bond yields
Feb 15, 2022 (Gmt+09:00)
3 Min read -
Corporate bondsKorea corporate borrowing costs jump to 8-year peaks
Feb 10, 2022 (Gmt+09:00)
4 Min read -
Treasury bondsKorea bond yields near four-year highs on extra budget
Feb 09, 2022 (Gmt+09:00)
3 Min read -
Central bankingBOK restores interest rates to pre-pandemic level
Jan 14, 2022 (Gmt+09:00)
3 Min read -
Central bankingBank of Korea raises interest rates, signals further hikes
Nov 25, 2021 (Gmt+09:00)
3 Min read -
Comment 0
LOG IN