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South Korea import prices rise at sharpest pace in over 3 years

By Thomson Reuters Apr 14, 2026 | 4:08 PM

SEOUL, April 15 (Reuters) – South Korea’s import prices rose in March at the sharpest pace in more ​than three years on a ‌surge in oil prices sparked by the Middle East conflict, central bank data showed on Wednesday.

The Bank of Korea’s import price index ‌rose ​18.4% in March from ⁠a year earlier ⁠in won terms, after rising 1.6% in February. It was the biggest year-on-year increase since October 2022.

On a ​monthly basis, import prices, which affect domestic consumer prices with a lag ⁠of one to ⁠three months, rose 16.1%, the ​biggest since January 1998, as prices of ​crude oil surged by a record ‌88.5%.

“It is difficult to predict April data for now, because it will be difficult for supply disruptions of raw ⁠materials to be fully resolved for the time being,” a Bank of Korea official told ⁠a ‌briefing held prior to the ⁠data release.

In March, consumer prices ​rose ‌2.2% from a year ​earlier, picking ⁠up less than expected as the government capped fuel prices, but policymakers and economists warned that risks remained tilted to the upside.

(Reporting by Jihoon LeeEditing by ​Ed Davies)