Korea Morning Headlines — 2026-06-13
A summary of key political, economic, and social news in Korea for June 12–13, 2026. The focus is on economic volatility and employment weakness driven by escalating tensions in the Middle East.
Korea Morning Headlines — 2026-06-13
Politics
No major political news reported today.
Economy
Market volatility spikes amid Middle East tensions The Middle East situation is deteriorating as the U.S. continues airstrikes on Iran for the second consecutive day. Brent crude is trading between $94–$95 per barrel, while Russian Urals are attempting to break the $90 mark. The domestic stock market faces potential further corrections due to these geopolitical risks.

BOK Governor: "Focus on price stability, rate hikes coming soon" In his anniversary address, Bank of Korea Governor Hyun Song Shin indicated that interest rates will be raised at an appropriate time to ensure price stability, stating that inflation is expected to exceed target levels for a significant period. He added that the exchange rate is gradually stabilizing.

ECB becomes first G7 central bank to hike rates after Iran conflict During its monetary policy meeting on June 11, 2026, the European Central Bank (ECB) raised its deposit rate by 0.25 percentage points to 2.25%. This is the first hike in about three years since September 2023, making it the first G7 central bank to pivot toward tightening.
Coupang resumes seller loans after 6 months with lower rates Coupang has resumed its seller loan program after a six-month hiatus, lowering interest rates from 8.9–18.9% per annum to 8.4–17.4%.
Society
Employment falls by 40,000 in May, first decline in 17 months The number of employed people in Korea decreased by 40,000 year-on-year in May, marking the first negative growth in 17 months—a trend not seen since the martial law period in December 2024. This downturn is attributed to the prolonged Middle East war and rising raw material costs, with continued employment weakness in agriculture, forestry, fishing, manufacturing, and construction.

Manufacturing jobs see largest drop in 7 years despite 205% jump in semiconductor exports Despite a semiconductor boom, manufacturing employment saw its largest decline in 7 years and 3 months. Youth employment and the employment rate have experienced their sharpest drops since the COVID-19 pandemic, with persistent sluggishness in sectors like professional, scientific, and technical services.

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