City
Epaper

S. Korea gradually feeling impact of prolonged Middle East crisis

By IANS | Updated: May 15, 2026 09:35 IST

Seoul, May 15 South Korea is gradually feeling the impact of the prolonged conflict in the Middle East ...

Open in App

Seoul, May 15 South Korea is gradually feeling the impact of the prolonged conflict in the Middle East through higher consumer prices despite strong export data, the finance minister said on Friday, vowing proactive steps to stabilise supply chains.

Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol presided over a meeting of economy-related ministers in Seoul to discuss countermeasures against the economic fallout from the geopolitical crisis in the Middle East, according to the Ministry of Finance and Economy, reports Yonhap news agency.

"While South Korea has shown strong resilience against crises by posting record exports, current account surpluses and stock market indexes, the prolonged war has started to have a visible impact on the real economy and people's livelihoods," Koo was quoted as saying by the ministry.

"The government intends to minimise challenges to people's livelihoods caused by the Middle East crisis while closely monitoring situations at home and abroad," the minister added.

Koo also expressed gratitude to local gas stations for their cooperation with the government's fuel price ceiling scheme, noting market prices currently remain below the cap.

The finance minister said the government is drawing up an economic growth strategy for the second half of 2026 with a focus on strengthening the country's economic security by taking lessons from the Middle East war.

South Korea will closely review changes in the economic environment, including the boom in the semiconductor industry, along with measures to ease economic polarisation, he added.

The country will release the growth strategy for the second half at the end of June, according to the ministry.

Koo additionally presided over a meeting of real estate-related ministers, where he said the government will take all available measures to stabilise the property market.

"A prompt supply of housing is more critical than anything else," Koo said, noting the government will work to shorten the process of supplying more homes to the public.

"The government is thoroughly monitoring unfair practices in the real estate market with relevant organisations and taking stern action," he added.

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

BusinessBahwan CyberTek Launches Agentic AI-Powered Managed Services Platform in partnership with iFIX Tech Global

BusinessThe Importance of the ‘Right Fit’ in Family Office Hiring and Why the Skill Sets Are Different

BusinessMorgan Stanley bullish on India with strong year ahead, says markets supported by growth and reforms

BusinessIDFC First bank scam: CBI conducts searches at seven locations in Chandigarh, Panchkula

NationalSuvendu Adhikari govt's three-pronged strategy to hand over land to BSF for border fencing

Business Realted Stories

BusinessGold import duty hike may support India’s current account by 23 bps: Report

BusinessAlgoShack Ranked #27 Globally Among 900+ AI Testing Companies - Emerges as India's Only ISO-Certified Autonomous Testing Platform

BusinessIndia requires Rs 80 lakh crore investment in urban infra by 2037: Report

BusinessVodafone Idea Shares Jumps Ahead Of Q4 Results; Investors Eye Fundraising Announcement

BusinessRs 3 fuel price hike a measured, responsible decision: CAIT