South Korean National Assembly celebrates passage of 26.2 trillion-won extra budget for Mideast conflict economic aid.
South Korean National Assembly celebrates passage of 26.2 trillion-won extra budget for Mideast conflict economic aid.
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National Assembly passes 26.2 trillion-won extra budget for Mideast war fallout

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South Korea's National Assembly passed a 26.2 trillion-won ($17.7 billion) extra budget bill on April 10 to address economic fallout from the Middle East conflict, with a 214-11 vote. The ruling Democratic Party and opposition People Power Party agreed to maintain the government's proposed size. About 35.8 million people will receive cash payments ranging from 100,000 to 600,000 won based on income and region.

The National Assembly's plenary session approved the supplementary budget legislation in a 214-11 vote with 19 abstentions out of 244 members present, 10 days after the government submitted it. The ruling Democratic Party (DP) and main opposition People Power Party (PPP) agreed earlier in the day to keep the 26.2 trillion-won ($17.7 billion) size unchanged from the initial proposal.

The bill includes the government's plan to provide cash assistance to the bottom 70 percent of income earners to ease the burden from rising oil prices. With its passage, about 35.8 million people will receive between 100,000 won and 600,000 won per person, differentiated by income level and region. The parties also agreed to allocate an additional 200 billion won for stable naphtha supply, a key petrochemical feedstock.

The extra budget aims to mitigate rising oil prices' impact and protect small businesses and vulnerable households from the Middle East conflict's repercussions. The PPP argued that included projects were inconsistent with the bill's purpose and called for direct aid programs, while the DP urged swift passage.

Cheong Wa Dae expressed gratitude for the bipartisan cooperation. Presidential spokesperson Kang Yu-jung stated in a briefing, "We express our gratitude to the ruling and opposition parties for swiftly passing the bill through bipartisan cooperation that placed national interests first in the face of the crisis caused by the Middle East war." The government plans prompt implementation of measures like naphtha support, public transport discounts, and fuel subsidies for farmers and fishermen.

Mitä ihmiset sanovat

Discussions on X largely welcome the National Assembly's passage of the 26.2 trillion-won supplementary budget to counter Mideast war economic fallout, highlighting bipartisan cooperation and aid to low-income groups via cash payments up to 600,000 won. Democratic Party lawmakers and officials praise swift minsheng support like K-Pass discounts and fuel subsidies. A minority voices skepticism on fiscal sustainability and criticizes excessive spending.

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South Korean officials agree on 25 trillion-won budget to counter Middle East crisis and oil price surge.
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South Korean gov't, ruling party agree on 25 trillion-won supplementary budget amid Middle East crisis

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South Korea's government, ruling Democratic Party and presidential office agreed on a 25 trillion-won supplementary budget to address the Middle East crisis. The bill is set for submission to the National Assembly by end-March and passage on April 10. It aims to ease high oil prices and economic uncertainties.

A senior Cheong Wa Dae official said the government may consider another supplementary budget in the second half if the Middle East crisis persists. Hong Ik-pyo, presidential secretary for political affairs, denied opposition claims that the pending 26.2 trillion-won extra budget seeks political leverage before June 3 local elections. He cited downgraded growth forecasts and rising fuel prices.

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South Korea will begin distributing a second round of cash assistance next week to about 36 million people in the bottom 70 percent of income earners. The move seeks to ease financial strains from rising fuel prices amid the war in the Middle East, following an initial April rollout to the most vulnerable groups.

The Japanese government approved an 8.56 trillion yen stopgap budget on March 27 to fund operations for the first 11 days of fiscal 2026 starting April 1, due to stalled upper house deliberations on the main 122.31 trillion yen budget passed by the lower house earlier this month. This is the first such provisional measure in 11 years, backed by ruling and main opposition parties, and expected to pass parliament on March 30.

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President Lee Jae Myung is set to meet leaders of the ruling and main opposition parties on Tuesday to discuss measures to mitigate economic fallout from the Middle East war. The gathering at Cheong Wa Dae includes key figures from the Democratic Party of Korea and People Power Party, marking the first such meeting since September last year.

South Korea's National Assembly foreign affairs committee will hold an emergency session this Friday to discuss the impacts of U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran. The session follows attacks that began Saturday and resulted in the death of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. The committee is expected to address global oil prices, the local currency, the economy, and government responses.

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Prime Minister Kim Min-seok announced on March 25 that two emergency economic teams will launch at Cheong Wa Dae and his office to address the Middle East crisis. The move responds to the widening impact of the ongoing war involving the United States, Israel and Iran. He stressed the need to bolster the government's preemptive response for prolonged scenarios, including worst-case ones.

 

 

 

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