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Economy

Korea consumption, facility investment down in March

Manufacturing and service production rise, but the outlook is cloudy due to China lockdown, war in Ukraine

By Apr 29, 2022 (Gmt+09:00)

1 Min read

South Korea’s factory and service outputs rise in March, but the outlook is dark, given a potential slowdown in China’s economy and the war in Ukraine. A Cosco Shipping container ship is seen at the Yangshan Deep Water Port amid the COVID-19 outbreak in Shanghai, China April 24, 2022 (Courtesy of Reuters, Yonhap)
South Korea’s factory and service outputs rise in March, but the outlook is dark, given a potential slowdown in China’s economy and the war in Ukraine. A Cosco Shipping container ship is seen at the Yangshan Deep Water Port amid the COVID-19 outbreak in Shanghai, China April 24, 2022 (Courtesy of Reuters, Yonhap)

South Korea’s consumption and capital expenditures fell last month although production rebounded, government data showed, indicating the momentum for a recovery in Asia’s fourth-largest economy remains fragile amid growing inflationary pressures.

Retail sales, a gauge of the private sector’s spending dipped a seasonally adjusted 0.5% in March from the previous month with sales of durable goods such as passenger vehicles down 7%, according to Statistics Korea on Friday.

Investment in facilities dropped 2.9% on-month as spending on transportation equipment including automobiles, as well as machinery such as computers office equipment slid 3% and 2.9%, respectively. The overall capital expenditures in February tumbled by 5.6%.

Such declines came as inflationary pressure in the country grew on surging prices of crude oil and other commodities, as well as a weaker won currency.

On the other hand, production of all industries increased 1.5% after two straight months of decline as both manufacturing and service outputs rose.

Factory production grew 1.3% from the prior month, marking the fastest growth since December 2021. The output of transportation equipment excluding vehicles jumped 11.3% with strong production of tankers such as liquefied natural gas carriers.

Service output also rose 1.5% with higher production in the financial and insurance sectors.

But production may lose steam, given a potential slowdown in China’s economy due to lockdowns against the COVID-19, South Korea’s top overseas market, as well as the sustained global supply chain disruption amid the war in Ukraine, analysts said.

South Korea’s exports to China rose a mere 1.8% in the first 20 days of April from a year earlier, according to Korea Customs Service data released earlier this month.

Write to Eui-Jin Jeong at justin@hankyung.com
Jongwoo Cheon edited this article.
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