Bank of Korea Delivers First Rate Hike in 3 Years
2026-07-16 01:01
By
Kyrie Dichosa
1 min. read
The Bank of Korea (BoK) raised its base rate by 25 basis points to 2.75% at its July 2026 meeting, in line with market expectations, and marking the first rate hike since January 2023.
The decision reflected mounting inflationary pressures, with annual consumer inflation accelerating to 3.2% in June from 3.1% in May, remaining well above the central bank’s 2% target amid elevated oil prices and a weaker won.
Policymakers also cited robust household credit growth, rising property prices, and persistent exchange rate pressures as factors warranting tighter monetary policy.
At the same time, the BoK said concerns over economic weakness had eased amid a semiconductor export boom driven by AI demand and projected the economy to grow 2.6% in 2026.
Governor Shin Hyun-song emphasized that restoring price stability had become the central bank’s priority despite the higher borrowing costs for households and businesses.