Reportedly, South Korea's minister of finance says that it is not concerned about capital controls. | Best of Business Today
Home News Reportedly, South Korea’s minister of finance says that it is not concerned about capital controls.

Reportedly, South Korea’s minister of finance says that it is not concerned about capital controls.

Reportedly, South Korea's minister of finance says that it is not concerned about capital controls.
South Korea’s finance minister has shrugged off short-term risks of capital outflows from the Asian economy as gaps in global rates widen. Speaking to CNBC at the Group of 20 meeting in Bali.

South Korea’s finance minister has shrugged off short-term risks of capital outflows from the Asian economy as gaps in global rates widen. Speaking to CNBC at the Group of 20 meeting in Bali, Choo Kyung-ho said capital outflows from a country don’t take place as a result of a single economic driver – such as interest rate gaps – since investors are also swayed by other factors, like the strength of an economy.

Choo, who is also the country’s deputy prime minister, acknowledged there are concerns the U.S. may be headed for more aggressive rate hikes, and the widening rate gap could trigger capital outflows from South Korea.

“The rate gap has happened before a couple of times, but we didn’t experience any major capital outflows,” he said Friday, according to CNBC’s translation. “Based on that, I think capital outflow doesn’t happen simply because of a rate differential.”

Capital outflows occur when assets and money leave one country for another due to better investment returns, such as higher interest rates.

The U.S. Federal Reserve is poised to make another major rate hike at its coming July meeting with some traders betting last week on an increase as high as 100 basis points after U.S. consumer inflation hit a 40-year high of 9.1%.

“The most important things are an economy’s fundamentals, whether the economy can show reliability to markets. These are the factors that move capital,” Choo told CNBC’s, Martin Soong.

However, the South Korean finance minister said the Fed’s aggressive interest rate hikes – an attempt to rein in inflation – are still cause for concern. The growing difference in borrowing costs between the U.S. and South Korea could accelerate capital flows between the two countries down the road, he added.

Recent capital inflows into the South Korean economy, particularly into the treasury markets, have also helped mitigate concerns of an outward capital flight, Choo added.

“South Korea’s economy is experiencing a smaller moderation compared to the global economy. And it is still on a recovery path,” he said.

“That’s why I am not worried about any dramatic capital outflows.”

Last week, the Bank of Korea acknowledged there were risks of capital outflows when it delivered a historic half-point interest rate increase in a bid to rein in rising prices, as inflation soared to its fastest pace in 24 years.

Concerns of capital outflows, or capital flight, are starting to emerge as central banks globally race to raise interest rates in an effort to curb rising inflation.