
South Korea’s central bank has cut its benchmark interest rate to 2.5%, down by 0.25 percentage points, and sharply lowered its 2025 economic growth outlook to 0.8%, nearly half the earlier projection of 1.5%. This marks the fourth rate cut since October, as the country struggles with both internal and external economic shocks.
So, what does this mean for the average Korean?
Borrowing might get cheaper, but jobs aren’t bouncing back anytime soon. Consumption is still weak. Business investments are stuck. And yes, prices may stay flat, but your paycheck probably will too.

This latest move is a direct response to U.S. President Donald Trump’s renewed tariff war, which has rattled trade-dependent economies like South Korea.
Trump’s aggressive stance has targeted exports like semiconductors and cars, vital to Korea’s economy. Even with a court challenge to Trump’s authority on tariffs, the White House is pushing ahead, keeping Seoul on edge.
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Domestic Troubles Add to the Pressure
South Korea isn’t just fighting external battles. Political instability at home is making things worse. The country is still reeling from former President Yoon Suk Yeol’s martial law fiasco last December. His ouster in April has left a power vacuum, with a snap presidential election next week.
And when leadership collapses, so does confidence.
The Bank of Korea says economic activity stayed sluggish in April after a rough first quarter. Job creation in manufacturing? Still weak. Consumer spending? Still stuck. The Kospi index rose by 1.7%, but that’s more investor hope than real growth.
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A Global Economy Under Strain
Yes, global trade tensions have slightly cooled, but the damage lingers. Tariffs have raised costs and slowed recovery. U.S.-China tensions, geopolitical flare-ups, and unpredictable markets all weigh heavily on outlooks. South Korea’s central bank warned these risks aren’t going away.
Despite outreach to Washington, Seoul’s leverage in talks is limited. It’s hard to negotiate trade when your government is barely standing and your economy is losing steam.
This isn’t just about numbers—it’s about direction. And right now, South Korea’s central bank is trying to steer a ship through choppy waters, with one hand tied behind its back and an angry Trump waving tariffs in the rearview mirror.
As always, when elephants fight, the grass suffers. And in this case, the grass is Seoul’s struggling middle class.
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