President Lee to preside over emergency economic meeting on Middle East tensions

President Lee Jae Myung will preside over an emergency meeting with related ministries on Monday to review the economic impact from heightened tensions in the Middle East and discuss response measures, Cheong Wa Dae said Sunday. The meeting will focus on global financial markets and oil prices. South Korea, heavily reliant on energy imports, is particularly vulnerable to external price shocks.

President Lee Jae Myung will preside over an emergency economic meeting with ministers from related ministries on Monday, following an announcement from Cheong Wa Dae on Sunday, March 8, 2026. The gathering aims to assess the economic repercussions of escalating tensions in the Middle East and deliberate on countermeasures. Presidential spokesperson Kang Yu-jung stated that participants will include senior officials from the finance, industry, climate and energy, budget planning, and agriculture ministries, as well as the Korea Customs Service and the Fair Trade Commission.

During the meeting, Lee is expected to examine global financial markets and oil prices, evaluating their effects on the domestic stock market, foreign exchange market, and inflation. This follows an extraordinary Cabinet meeting on Thursday, where Lee reviewed the latest Middle East developments after U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran and Tehran's retaliatory attacks in the region.

South Korea's heavy reliance on energy imports makes it especially susceptible to external price shocks, which can drive inflation. Both sources confirm these details without contradictions.

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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.

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.

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President Lee Jae-myung presided over a meeting on March 18 with financial authorities and investors to address capital market volatility from ongoing Middle East tensions—building on last week's emergency economic review—and discuss structural reforms. Attendees included Financial Services Commission Chairman Lee Eog-won and Financial Supervisory Service Governor Lee Chan-jin.

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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.

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Deputy finance ministers from South Korea, China, Japan and ASEAN discussed economic impacts and responses to the Middle East conflict. The virtual ASEAN+3 Finance and Central Bank Deputies' Meeting on Wednesday heard warnings from the IMF and ADB about downside risks to the global economy from rising geopolitical tensions. Participants shared policy measures and called for closer regional coordination.

 

 

 

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