South Korea Dec inflation steady at 5.0%, as expected

Reuters

Published Dec 29, 2022 08:12PM ET

Updated Dec 29, 2022 08:31PM ET

SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea's consumer prices in December rose 5.0% from a year earlier, official data showed on Friday, matching market expectations and the pace seen in November.

The consumer price index (CPI) was 0.2% higher than in November, when it showed a 0.1% monthly decline, according to Statistics Korea data. The median forecasts from a Reuters poll were for the CPI to be up 0.1% on the month and 5.0% on a year before.

A breakdown of the data showed prices of agricultural products had been 1.6% lower than in December 2021. But utility prices jumped 23.2% and private service prices 6.0%, keeping the overall annual inflation rate high. The annual rate peaked at 6.3% in July.

Both the central bank and government have said that inflation will ease only gradually and that there is huge uncertainty about the near-term inflation path.

After the data release, the Bank of Korea said in a statement it expected annual inflation to hover around 5% through early 2023, with both upside and downside risks.

Separately, the finance ministry said it would continue efforts for price stabilisation, citing price adjustments at the beginning of the new year and increased demand during Lunar New Year holidays as risk factors.

The Bank of Korea has raised its policy interest rate by 275 basis points since August 2021 and is widely expected to implement just one more rise in the current cycle, in early 2023.