Bank of Korea Governor Lee Ju-yeol speaks during a news conference at Seoul Foreign Correspondents Club, Jan. 22, 2015.
Photo: REUTERS/KIM HONG-JI
South Korea's central bank governor threw the full weight of
the bank behind a structural reform effort on Monday, but did not
mention whether the bank would be engaging in quantitative easing, which
it is under pressure to provide.
The governor's comments followed a day after Finance
Minister Yoo Il-ho said in a television interview that policymakers were
contemplating the best strategy to support two state-run policy banks
involved in a massive overhaul of South Korea's shipping and
shipbuilding industries.
"We should be extremely wary of the possibility of any
temporary effects like negative influences on financial markets or a
worsening of corporate liquidity," Bank of Korea Governor Lee Ju-yeol
told his top officials before leaving for the annual meeting of the
Asian Development Bank.
Lee added corporate structural reform was "very important" for Asia's fourth-largest economy.
South Korean President Park Geun-hye has said allowing the
Bank of Korea to undertake some form of quantitative easing should be
considered to ensure credit goes where it is needed during the
structural reform process.
Park has said the quantitative easing mix being considered
was not of the kind that has been seen in advanced economies such as the
U.S., Japan or the European Union.
"We are thinking of a mix of fiscal and monetary policy rather than just one," Yoo said on Sunday.
When asked whether quantitative easing being undertaken by the
central bank was possible, Yoo added that it too was a candidate for
inclusion in the policy mix.
Last Friday, the central bank's labor union criticized calls
for quantitative easing, saying it could harm the central bank's
independence and the union would protest against it for as long as
possible.
"What the government is calling for is not quantitative
easing. They are crying out wine and selling vinegar," the union said in
a statement.
A task force of officials from the government, central bank
and other related bodies, will hold its first meeting later this week —
chaired by the first vice finance minister.
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