Fuel product price caps to remain in place for some time: finance chief

Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol said Monday that temporary price caps on fuel products will remain in place for some time due to instability in the Middle East.

Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol told reporters in Sejong on Monday that the government plans to maintain the measure for some time until the situation in the Middle East stabilizes.

The government introduced the price system in mid-March to curb inflation driven by surging global oil prices after the Strait of Hormuz was effectively closed following U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran in late February. Fuel price ceilings are reviewed every two weeks, and the latest adjustment announced Thursday froze them for the third consecutive review period.

The country's consumer prices rose 2.6 percent in April from a year earlier, mainly due to higher fuel costs linked to the conflict. Koo said South Korea has responded more effectively than many other countries to the inflationary pressure.

He also expected the economy to grow more than 2 percent in 2026, citing the first-quarter GDP expansion of 1.7 percent.

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Illustration of a gas station in Seoul showing lowered fuel prices with frozen utility symbols.
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South Korea plans to lower fuel price cap and freeze utility rates

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South Korea will lower the cap on fuel prices to reflect the recent decline in global crude oil prices while freezing electricity and gas rates in the second half, Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol said on Friday.

Prime Minister Kim Min-seok said Wednesday the government will decide whether to extend fuel price caps after a careful review, as the temporary measure expires this week. Introduced in mid-March to counter supply disruptions from the Middle East conflict, the system has shown positive effects despite mixed opinions. Kim made the remarks at a meeting on the crisis's economic impact.

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Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan said the end of the US-Iran war and stabilization of fuel prices are preconditions for lifting domestic fuel price ceilings. Speaking at a press briefing on economy issues in Sejong on April 27, he outlined three conditions. The government froze price ceilings again on Thursday.

Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol said Friday the government is taking extra vigilance over recent volatility in the foreign exchange market.

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The state-run Korea Electric Power Corp. said Monday it will keep electricity rates unchanged for the third quarter amid its financial troubles.

Statistics Korea reported on May 29 that industrial output fell 0.6 percent in April from March, with retail sales and facility investment also dropping 3.6 percent each.

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The South Korean government announced on Thursday it will expand tax cuts on liquefied petroleum gas butane products from 10 percent to 25 percent starting next month through June. The measure aims to mitigate the domestic impact of international price surges due to the Middle Eastern crisis. The Fair Trade Commission plans stronger penalties for repeated collusion cases.

 

 

 

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