What Just Happened
The Bank of Korea did something this week it has not done in more than three years. It raised rates.
The central bank lifted its benchmark interest rate by 0.25 percentage points, bringing it to 2.75%. Before this move, the bank had been cutting rates since late 2024 - four cuts in total. The last rate increase was in January 2023.
So why flip the switch now? The short answer is an AI-driven semiconductor boom that is reshaping South Korea's economy faster than almost anyone expected.
The Chip Boom That Changed the Math
South Korea's economy grew 1.8% in the first quarter of 2026, faster than analysts predicted. The International Monetary Fund revised its full-year growth forecast up to 2.6%, the biggest upward revision among the world's 30 largest economies. The South Korean government itself expects 3% growth for the year.
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That kind of boom shows up in other places, too. The country's current-account surplus for the first five months of 2026 already exceeded the full-year total for 2025.
But a booming economy also means rising prices. June 2026 saw consumer price inflation reach 3.2%, a level not seen in over two years. The government expects average inflation of 2.6% for the full year.
And it is not just about chips. The Bank of Korea also pointed to rising house prices - apartment prices in Seoul have gone up for 75 consecutive weeks - growing household borrowing, and a weak currency. The Korean won touched its weakest level against the U.S. dollar since 2009 back in June. All of those factors pushed the central bank to tighten.
South Korea's heavy reliance on semiconductor exports amplifies the AI boom's impact. Memory chip prices have soared, boosting profits at giants like SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics, while the country's trade surplus has widened sharply. This export-led growth, however, also stokes domestic demand and adds to inflationary pressures across the economy.
What Comes Next
Markets expect the Bank of Korea to keep raising rates into next year. But the next meeting, scheduled for August 27, might not bring another increase.
Analysts have a few reasons to think the bank will hold off. Oil prices are still high, which keeps upward pressure on costs. The pace of wage increases is decelerating.
Meanwhile, the Korean won has recovered somewhat from its recent trough. According to fixed-income analyst Lim Jae-kyun of KB Securities, worries about repo funds will probably prevent the Bank of Korea from raising rates again in consecutive meetings.
Economist Jemin Choi at Hyundai Motor Securities Co. put it this way: "The BOK is expected to retain a hawkish bias and leave the possibility of further tightening on the table."
Market participants will be watching for Governor Shin Hyun Song's evaluation of the surprisingly robust expansion, widespread price increases, and mounting financial stability threats.
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