Economy June 17, 2026 01:06 AM

Bank of Korea Sees Inflation Above Target Into Next Year, Signalling Possible Rate Tightening

Central bank warns cost and wage pressures, citing high oil prices and FX pass-through despite easing Middle East conflict

By Nina Shah
Share
Twitter Reddit Facebook LinkedIn

The Bank of Korea says inflation is likely to remain elevated through next year, driven by cost-side effects from high oil prices and exchange rates and growing demand-side pressures such as large bonus payouts at some technology firms. The outlook supports near-term monetary tightening after consumer inflation rose to 3.1% in May.

Bank of Korea Sees Inflation Above Target Into Next Year, Signalling Possible Rate Tightening
Summarize with
ChatGPT Perplexity Claude Grok Gemini

Key Points

  • Bank of Korea expects inflation to remain above its 2% medium-term target through next year, with consumer inflation around 3% in H2.
  • Cost-side pressures from high oil prices and exchange rates are expected to transmit to other products, even if oil eases as the U.S.-Iran conflict winds down.
  • Growing demand-side pressure from wage increases, including large bonus payments at some technology firms, supports the case for monetary tightening soon; majority of BOK board members signalled preparedness to tighten.

The Bank of Korea (BOK) said on Wednesday that inflation is expected to remain above its medium-term target through next year, as upward price pressures persist despite signs that talks between the United States and Iran could ease the regional conflict.

In its semi-annual report on inflation-targeting policy, the central bank cautioned that inflation will stay elevated for a prolonged period. While it noted that oil prices should gradually decline if the war situation eases, the BOK warned that cost-side inflationary pressure from elevated oil prices and exchange rates is likely to transmit to other goods and services.

The bank projected consumer inflation to hover around 3% in the second half of the year and to continue exceeding its 2% medium-term target into next year. The report highlighted growing demand-side pressure from wage increases, including large bonus payments at some technology companies, as a factor supporting inflation above target.

Those projections reinforce arguments for monetary tightening as soon as next month, the central bank said, following a May rise in consumer inflation to 3.1% - a more than two-year high - which was propelled in part by higher oil prices linked to the Middle East conflict.

Separately, details emerged on Tuesday regarding an interim agreement between the United States and Iran to halt the war in the Middle East. U.S. President Donald Trump said the pact will rule out a nuclear weapon for Tehran, and a U.S. official indicated that Iran would be allowed to sell oil once it signs the agreement. The BOK commented that such developments could lead to a gradual decline in oil prices, but maintained that existing cost and exchange-rate pressures would continue to feed through to domestic prices.

The global policy backdrop has also seen other central banks responding to war-driven energy shocks. On Tuesday, the Bank of Japan raised interest rates to a 31-year high in a move it had signalled, saying it stood prepared to tighten further to confront inflationary pressure from the energy shock.

Minutes from last month’s BOK board meeting, released on Tuesday, showed that a majority of board members believed policymakers should prepare to tighten policy soon. The minutes cited escalating inflationary pressures from high global oil prices and robust export growth as reasons to be ready to act.


The BOK’s assessment underlines the tension between an improving geopolitical picture and persistent domestic inflation drivers - a mix the central bank says will keep inflation above its target horizon and increase the likelihood of nearer-term rate increases.

Risks

  • Oil price and exchange-rate driven cost pass-through could keep inflation elevated, affecting consumer-facing sectors such as energy and goods.
  • Rising wage-related demand pressures, including sizable bonuses in the technology sector, may sustain inflation and prompt monetary tightening that impacts borrowing costs across financial markets.
  • Uncertainty around the implementation and timing of any U.S.-Iran interim agreement could create volatility in oil markets and exchange rates, influencing inflation dynamics and policy responses.

More from Economy

Northern Ireland Leads UK Regions in Post-Brexit Growth, Driven by Services and Cross-Border Integration Jun 17, 2026 UK Consumer Inflation Stalls at 2.8% in May Ahead of BoE Decision Jun 17, 2026 Iran Conflict Hampers Global Growth as G7 Seeks Avoidance of Confrontation in France Jun 17, 2026 Warsh’s First Fed Meeting Puts Markets on Edge - All Eyes on His Messaging Jun 17, 2026 Oil Slides as Iran Supply Prospects Rise Amid Fed Waiting Game Jun 16, 2026