City
Epaper

Consumer prices rise 2.2 pc in S. Korea on surging oil prices

By IANS | Updated: April 2, 2026 09:15 IST

Seoul, April 2 South Korea's consumer prices rose 2.2 per cent in March from a year earlier, mainly ...

Open in App

Seoul, April 2 South Korea's consumer prices rose 2.2 per cent in March from a year earlier, mainly due to a hike in global oil prices caused by prolonged tensions in the Middle East, government data showed on Thursday.

The reading, which hovers above the government's 2 percent inflation target, marks the steepest on-year increase since December, when inflation stood at 2.3 percent, according to the Ministry of Data and Statistics, reports Yonhap news agency.

The latest rise was driven by a surge in the price of petroleum products, which jumped 9.9 percent from a year earlier, marking the sharpest increase since October 2022, when the price spiked 10.3 percent on-year amid the Russia-Ukraine war.

Notably, diesel and gasoline prices jumped 17 percent and 8 percent on-year, respectively.

"Gasoline demand is limited to passenger cars, whereas diesel is used for transportation and goods, which is why the increase was larger," Lee Doo-won, a ministry official, said.

Global oil prices have risen sharply as the Strait of Hormuz has effectively been closed since U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran in late February, disrupting global oil supplies. South Korea relies heavily on imports for energy.

Prices of agricultural, livestock and fishery products edged down 0.6 percent, mainly due to a sharp drop in agricultural product prices, which fell 5.6 percent on-year. Prices of livestock and fishery products rose 6.2 percent and 4.4 percent, respectively.

Service prices increased 2.4 percent from a year earlier, driven by higher insurance costs.

Processed food prices rose 1.6 percent on-year in March, slowing from 2.1 percent growth in the previous month, and also marking the lowest growth rate since November 2024.

Prices of sugar fell 3.1 percent on-year after factory prices were cut, and those of flour dropped 2.3 percent on-year.

Core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, rose 2.2 percent on-year last month, the ministry said.

The government said the increase in consumer prices, despite rising fuel prices, was partly tempered by a fuel price cap system, pledging to continue taking all-out efforts to stabilise prices amid ongoing volatility.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessIndia in talks with 20 more countries to open market access: Piyush Goyal

InternationalJapan to release extra 20 days' oil reserves from May

NationalPresident Murmu nominates Harivansh to Rajya Sabha for third term

NationalJD(U) supporters put up posters urging Nitish Kumar not to leave Bihar

MaharashtraEknath Shinde Held Secret Meeting With Shiv Sena UBT Leaders in Thane? Thackeray MPs Deny Reports

Business Realted Stories

BusinessDalcore Launches North India's First YOO-branded Residences 'The Falcon' in Gurugram, Brings YOO Inspired by Starck-designed Living to Delhi NCR

BusinessJefferies stays marginally overweight on India; valuations improve despite weak Q1

BusinessMinistry of Petroleum & Natural Gas extends bulk LPG allocation to key industrial sectors

BusinessExchange India Reports Rs 28 Crore Debt Repayment Over Two Quarters

BusinessGold, silver decline nearly 1 pc as profit booking offsets demand