RSS    

   Korea in Focus

number of telephone lines to 10.14 million as of 1993. Virtually every home

in the country now has its own telephone and all the telephone circuits are

connected by automatic switching systems.

Also, through the launch of KOREASAT scheduled in 1995, Korea will be

able to provide satellite communication services by using its own satellite

from October 1995.

THE ECONOMY

Looking Ahead to the 21st Century

In the last quarter century, Korea’s economic growth has been among

the fastest in the world. The country has overcome obstacles and challenges

to transform itself from a subsistence-level economy into one of the

world’s leading newly industrialized countries. Today, however, the Korean

economy faces the new challenges of internationalization and globalization

in an increasingly complex global economic environment.

Past Performance and Policies

Since Korea launched its First Five-Year Economic Development Plan in

1962, the country’s real GNP has expanded by an average of more than 8

percent per year. As a result, Korea’s GNP has grown from US$2.3 billion in

1962 to US$328.7 billion in 1993; per capita GNP has increased from a

meager US$82 in 1962 to US$7,466 in 1993 at current price levels.

The industrial structure of the Korean economy has also been

completely transformed. The agricultural sector’s share of GNP declined

from 37.0 percent in 1962 to 7.1 percent in 1993. The manufacturing

sector’s share has increased from 14.4 percent to 27.1 percent in the same

period. The service sector accounted for only 24.1 percent of GNP in 1962

but grew to 40.0 percent in 1993.

Korea’s merchandise trade volume increased from US$500 million in

1962 to US$166 billion in 1993. The nation continuously posted trade

deficits until 1985 when its foreign debt reached US$46.8 billion, the

fourth largest in the world. From 1986 to 1989, Korea recorded current

account surpluses and its debt declined.

Trends of Major Economic Indicators

| |Unit |‘62 |‘70 |‘80 |‘85 |‘90 |‘92 |‘93 |

|GNP |US$ |2.3 |8.1 |60.5 |91.1 |251.8|305.7|328.7|

| |bil. | | | | | | | |

|Per Capita GNP |US$ |8.2 |242 |2,194|2,242|5,883|7,007|7,466|

|GNP Growth Rate |% |2.2 |7.6 |7.0 |7.0 |9.6 |5.0 |5.6 |

|Domestic Savings |% |3.3 |17.9 |29.1 |29.8 |35.9 |34.9 |34.9 |

|Ratio | | | | | | | | |

|Trade Volume |US$ |0.5 |2.8 |39.8 |61.4 |134.9|158.4|166.0|

| |bil. | | | | | | | |

|Producer Price |% |9.4 |9.2 |38.9 |0.9 |4.2 |2.2 |1.5 |

|Consumer Price |% |8.3 |15.9 |28.8 |2.4 |8.6 |6.2 |4.8 |

Inflation in Korea was one of the major economic problems in the 70s

and early 80s, during which consumer prices rose at annual rates of 10-20

percent. Since 1982, Korea has managed to keep inflation down to a single

digit. The ratio of domestic savings to GNP grew from 3.3 percent in 1962

to 34.9 percent in 1993.

Recent Challenges

Beginning in 1989, the Korean economy began experiencing slower

growth, high inflation and a deterioration in the balance of payments. The

GNP growth rate fell to 6.7 percent in 1989 from the 12 percent level of

previous years. A slump in the growth of the manufacturing sector, from

18.8 percent in 1987 and 13.4 percent in 1988 to 13.7 percent in 1989,

contributed largely to this decline in GNP growth rate. The export growth

rate on a customs clearance basis, which was 36.2 percent in 1987 and 28.4

percent in 1988, fell to just 2.8 percent in 1989. Reflecting this fall in

the export growth rate, the current account surplus lowered to around

US$5.1 billion, a significant drop from the 1988 surplus of US$14.2

billion.

In 1991, the economic growth rate showed signs of recovery. The GNP

grew during the year 9.1 percent. However, most of this growth was

attributed to an increase in domestic demand, particularly domestic

consumption. Exports increased 10.3 percent compared to 1990, while the

growth rate of imports increased 17.7 percent. The trade balance

deteriorate rapidly to a US$7.0 billion deficit in 1991 from the US$4.6

billion surplus in 1989. In addition, price stability, which had served to

boost Korea’s competitiveness, weakened. Consumer prices, which had risen

on an annual average of 2-3 percent between 1984 and 1987, rose 9.3 percent

in 1991.

Recent Economic Trends

| | |‘91 |‘92 |‘93 |‘94. 1 |

| | | | | |( 6 |

|GNP | | | | | |

| GNP |Growth Rate in |9.1 |5.0 |5.6 |8.5 |

| |% | | | | |

| Manufacturing |Growth Rate in |9.1 |5.1 |5.0 | |

|Sector |% | | | |10.0 |

| Private |Growth Rate in |9.5 |6.6 |5.7 |7.2 |

|Consumption |% | | | | |

| Investment |Growth Rate in | |0.8 |3.6 | |

| |% |12.6 | | |10.3 |

| Equipment |Growth Rate in | |1.1 |0.2 | |

| |% |12.1 | | |17.7 |

|Prices | | | | | |

| Producer Price |% |4.7 |2.2 |1.5 |2.2 |

| Consumer Price |% |9.3 |6.2 |4.8 |6.2 |

|Balance of Payments| |7.0 |2.2 |1.9 |1.6 |

| Export |US$ bil. | | | | |

| | |69.6 |75.1 |81.0 |43.1 |

| Imports |US$ bil. | | | | |

| | |76.6 |77.3 |79.1 |44.7 |

|Current Account | | | | | |

| Balance |US$ bil. |8.7 |4.5 |0.4 |2.7 |

In 1992, the Korean economy rapidly cooled off, with the GNP growth

rate dipping to 5.0 percent, influenced chiefly by blunted investment in

capital goods. The consumer price index rose just 6.2 percent, and the

deficit in the balance of payments also dropped to US$4.5 billion.

At that time, the Korean economy faced many challenges on both the

internal and external fronts. Part of the economic slowdown may be

explained by the cyclical adjustment of the economy after three consecutive

years of rapid growth. However, the stagnation was more likely the result

of a structural deterioration in competitiveness, due to a combination of

the lingering legacies of the past government-led economic management

system, which had now become inefficient, and the disappearance of the

advantages derived from the once ample availability of low-cost labor: Thus

the country was forced to search for a new driving force sufficient for

sustained economic growth.

Major Tasks and Policy Directions

To revitalize the economy, the Kim Young Sam Administration, which

was inaugurated in February 1993 as the first civilian democratic

government in over three decades, is endeavoring to construct a new

developmental paradigm called “the New Economy”. This signals a clean

departure from the past, when the government directed and controlled the

concentrated investment of capital, labor and other resources in selected

“strategic” industrial sectors to achieve rapid economic growth. Instead,

the New Economy will promote the autonomy and creativity of all economic

actors in order to maximize efficiency, while ensuring the equitable

distribution of income. In that way, it seeks to enable the nation to leap

into the ranks of the developed nations within the next five years.

As an initial step, the new Administration implemented a short-term

100-Day Plan for the New Economy in March 1993, designed to promptly create

conditions conductive to revitalizing the economy. This was followed by the

development of a new five-year economic development plan. Formally

announced in July 1993, the Five-Year Plan for the New Economy was

conceived primarily to lay the basis for joining the ranks of advanced

countries and thus to effectively prepare for the eventual unification of

the Korean Peninsula.

The Government will continue its efforts to ensure the effective

implementation of the five-year plan through the spontaneous participation

Страницы: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5


Новости


Быстрый поиск

Группа вКонтакте: новости

Пока нет

Новости в Twitter и Facebook

                   

Новости

© 2010.