Bank of Korea Governor Rhee Chang-yong (File photo, courtesy of Yonhap) South Korea’s central bank chief expected consumer inflation to fall below the mid-2% level in the second half of 2024, adding to predictions of interest rate cuts next year to support a recovery in Asia’s fourth-largest economy.
“Headline inflation is likely to rise again above 3% in August and September, but it is expected to gradually decline below mid-2% around the second half of next year,” Bank of Korea Governor Rhee Chang-yong told lawmakers on Tuesday.
Rhee’s comments came as some economists and financial market analysts have been expecting the BOK to cut its policy interest rate next year given that an economic recovery has yet to gain momentum and inflationary pressure continued to ease.
The central bank was forecast to leave the rate unchanged on Thursday, according to a survey of 100 bond market participants, including fund managers, by the Korea Financial Investment Association.
Some 92% of respondents bet on a freeze, while the rest expected a 25-basis-point hike, according to the poll.
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