Container terminals at the Port of Busan, South Korea South Korea logged a trade surplus in February on strong exports after deficits in the previous two months, the recovery remained fragile, given Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Exports jumped 20.6% to $53.9 billion in February from a year earlier with average daily shipments at a record high of $2.7 billion, according to the data.
Overseas sales of semiconductors increased 24%, while exports of computers and displays reported jumps of 44.5% and 39.2%, respectively. But sales of auto parts to other countries dipped 1.1% as the ongoing automotive chip shortage disrupted productions of global carmakers.
Imports grew 25.1% on-year to $53.1 billion as purchases of oil, gas and coals surged 53.2% to $12.5 billion. But the procurement of the energy resources fell by $3.5 billion from January when demand is usually stronger than February due to the weather conditions.
ECONOMIC SANCTIONS AGAINST RUSSIA
The country’s trade account may turn to a deficit as Russia’s military attack on Ukraine powered energy prices that are expected to drive up import bills of the Asian nation.
The crisis is also predicted to undermine exports. Sales to the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) including Russia rose 45.6% in February, indicating the impact of the conflict has yet to be reflected in South Korea’s exports.
The country decided to tighten export controls against Russia by banning sales of strategic items and join Western nations’ moves to block some Russian banks from the SWIFT international payment system.
“The Korean government has strongly condemned Russia's armed invasion against Ukraine. As a responsible member of the international community, the Korean government has decided to actively join the international community’s efforts, including economic sanctions, for a peaceful resolution of the situation,” said the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Feb. 28. A view of a burning vehicle after night fighting in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Feb. 26. (Courtesy of EPA, Yonhap) At the same time, the government was set to carry out steps to minimize the impact of the crisis on exporters, the trade ministry said.
“In order to maintain exports growth in the future, we will try to minimize the impact of external factors such as the Ukraine crisis while intensively implementing export support measures such as easing logistics disruptions, converting customers and providing trade finance in the first half,” said trade minister Moon Sung-wook.
Write to Eui-Jin Jeong at justin@hankyung.com Jongwoo Cheon edited this article.
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