Split-image illustration contrasting South Korea's rising industrial output from semiconductors with sharp retail sales decline, featuring factory production and empty malls.
Split-image illustration contrasting South Korea's rising industrial output from semiconductors with sharp retail sales decline, featuring factory production and empty malls.
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Industrial output rises 0.9% in November; retail sales post sharpest fall in 21 months

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South Korea's industrial output grew 0.9 percent in November, driven by strong semiconductor production, while retail sales fell 3.3 percent, the sharpest drop in 21 months. Data from the Ministry of Data and Statistics attributes the retail decline to the fading effects of the Chuseok holiday and base effects. Cumulative retail sales for January to November rose 0.4 percent, suggesting a possible positive annual figure.

South Korea's industrial production rose 0.9 percent on-month in November, according to data released Tuesday by the Ministry of Data and Statistics. The growth was propelled by a 7.5 percent surge in semiconductor output, fueled by rising global demand amid the artificial intelligence boom. The mining and manufacturing sector, a cornerstone of the economy, increased 0.6 percent.

In contrast, retail sales—a key indicator of private consumption—plummeted 3.3 percent, marking the steepest decline since February 2024, when it fell 3.1 percent. The drop was driven by weaker sales in food and apparel, as the effects of the extended Chuseok holiday in early October faded. Semidurable goods like clothing declined 3.6 percent, non-durable goods including food fell 4.3 percent—the sharpest since February 2024—and durable goods such as home appliances slipped 0.6 percent.

"There is also a base effect following the increase in October due to the Chuseok holiday, a brief cold spell and various discount campaigns," said Lee Doo-won from the ministry.

Facility investment grew 1.5 percent, led by higher spending on machinery, though investment in transportation equipment including automobiles decreased. Industrial output has been volatile recently: it fell 0.3 percent in August, rose 1.3 percent in September, and dropped 2.7 percent in October.

Despite the monthly dip, cumulative retail sales from January to November rose 0.4 percent, raising hopes for a positive annual figure in 2025 and ending three years of declines. The ministry anticipates continued support from robust semiconductor exports and solid consumer sentiment.

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Discussions on X, mainly from news outlets and analysts, note South Korea's industrial output rose 0.9% in November driven by semiconductors, while retail sales fell 3.3%, the sharpest drop in 21 months due to fading Chuseok effects. Sentiments highlight an economic divide: positive on production rebound and investment, negative on consumption weakness.

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Illustration depicting South Korea's rising industrial output, retail sales, and facility investment in March, with factories, shoppers, construction, and upward charts.
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South Korea's industrial output, retail sales and facility investment rise in March

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South Korea's industrial output, retail sales and facility investment all rose from a month earlier in March, official data showed on April 30. It marked the first time since September that all three indicators posted on-month growth. A ministry official said the Middle East crisis has not yet impacted the economy.

South Korea's industrial output rose 2.5% in February from the previous month, the fastest growth in five years and eight months. Government data showed retail sales unchanged while facility investment jumped 13.5%. The Middle East crisis has had minimal impact so far.

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South Korea's real GDP jumped 1.7 percent in Q1 2026 from the prior quarter—the strongest growth in 5½ years—despite Middle East tensions, easily topping the Bank of Korea's 0.9 percent forecast on robust exports and steady domestic demand. Part of the rebound following 2025's modest 1% annual expansion (see prior article in series).

South Korea added 74,000 jobs in April, marking the slowest growth in 16 months amid higher oil prices and weaker consumer sentiment from the Middle East conflict.

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