South Korea cuts key interest rate as MERS outbreak causes panic

Bank of Korea policymakers cut the policy rate by a quarter of a percentage point to 1.5 per cent, the second rate cut this year.

June 11, 2015 08:23 am | Updated November 16, 2021 04:58 pm IST - SEOUL

Exports and imports continued to drop over a year earlier after the March rate cut due to sluggish global demand and a weak Japanese Yen.

Exports and imports continued to drop over a year earlier after the March rate cut due to sluggish global demand and a weak Japanese Yen.

South Korea’s central bank lowered its key interest rate to a historic low on Thursday, responding to a slump in exports and the prospect that the outbreak of the deadly MERS virus could slow the economy.

Bank of Korea policymakers cut the policy rate by a quarter of a percentage point to 1.5 per cent, the second rate cut this year. In March, the bank lowered the key rate and downgraded its growth forecast for Asia’s fourth-largest economy as exports continued to slump.

Consumption was on recovery track but began showing signs of contraction after the outbreak of MERS last month, while the decline in exports widened, the central bank said in a statement.

Exports and imports continued to drop over a year earlier after the March rate cut due to sluggish global demand and a weak Japanese Yen. The cheaper Yen hurt Korean exporters, especially automakers that compete with Japanese rivals in the global market.

Analysts initially expected the central bank to leave the policy rate unchanged but this changed after the MERS outbreak caused panic. The MERS virus could hurt businesses and dent consumptions as travellers cancel trips and people stay home out of worries of contagion. Thousands of schools closed while concerts and travel plans were cancelled. Industries that count Chinese tourists as key clients, such as airlines and cosmetics, are likely to be worst hit.

Middle East Respiratory Syndrome has killed nine and infected more than a 100 since the first case was diagnosed in May. Thousands are quarantined after possible contact with the virus.

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