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South Korea central bank to raise rates for first time in over three years on July 16: Reuters poll

By Thomson Reuters Jul 13, 2026 | 7:36 PM

By Renusri K

BENGALURU, July 14 (Reuters) – South Korea’s central bank is expected to raise interest rates on Thursday for the first time in more than three years and deliver another increase by the end of the year, according to a Reuters poll of economists, as inflation remains well above its 2% target.

Consumer inflation ​accelerated to a 2-1/2-year high of 3.2% in June, remaining above the Bank of Korea’s 2% target for ‌a fourth consecutive month. It is expected to average around 3% through the second half of the year, paving the way for the start of a tightening cycle.

Stronger economic growth, rising house prices and elevated household debt have given policymakers room to tighten. The economy grew at its fastest pace in nearly six years in the first quarter and BOK Governor Shin Hyun-song said it was necessary to raise interest rates as ‌inflation ​was expected to exceed the BOK’s target for a considerable period of time amid ⁠high oil prices triggered by the U.S.-Israeli ⁠war on Iran.

All but one of 37 economists in the July 7 to 13 Reuters poll expected the BOK to raise its base rate to 2.75% on July 16.

“It was relatively well broadcasted at the last meeting, when the BOK raised both its growth and inflation forecasts,” said Bum Ki Son, an economist at Barclays. “The governor made ​it clear that (the bank’s) mandates were, on a rare occasion, not conflicting but pointing in the same direction for a hike. We think this meeting is likely to be one where they will deliver that hike.”

Central banks in Australia, New ⁠Zealand, Indonesia and the Philippines have already tightened policy.

A majority of economists, ⁠28 out of 31, expected one more rate hike by the end of the fourth ​quarter, taking the policy rate to 3.00%. While one forecast the key rate at 3.25%, the remaining two predicted 2.75%.

The dot ​plot released in May also showed that a majority of board members projected the policy rate would ‌reach 3% over the next six months.

Median forecasts showed the BOK would raise its key rate to 3.25% in the first quarter of 2027 and keep it there through at least the end of next year, 25 basis points higher than forecast in the May survey.

That hawkish outlook reflects expectations of above-target inflation and strong economic growth. Inflation was expected to average 2.7% ⁠this year and 2.2% next year, while gross domestic product was expected to grow 2.8% in 2026 and 2.1% in 2027.

Elevated price pressures are expected to be driven largely by high global oil prices, stoked by the resumption of the Iran war. ⁠Supply-side pressures have also been aggravated by ‌a weaker South Korean won, which has fallen more than 4% so far this ⁠year, increasing the cost of imported raw materials.

The won is expected to weaken more than ​1% by ‌the end of July, a separate Reuters poll showed.

“We expect KRW weakness to be ​a key focus,” ⁠said Benson Wu, Korea economist at BofA Global Research. “While policymakers have intensified verbal intervention and coordinated messaging across ministries in recent weeks, the impact on the won appears to have been limited.”

“Accordingly, we will be watching closely for any signals that could open the door to back-to-back rate hikes,” Wu added, though he said that was not BofA’s base case.

(Other stories from the Reuters global economic poll)

(Reporting by Renusri K; Polling by Pranoy Krishna and Pulkit Khanna in Bengaluru, and Hyeyoon Cho and Jihoon Lee in Seoul; Editing by ​Vivek Mishra and Thomas Derpinghaus)