The Korea Herald

지나쌤

Korea’s corporate debt jumps in Q1

By Korea Herald

Published : Aug. 7, 2012 - 20:40

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Korea’s corporate debt rose sharply in the first quarter of this year, data showed Tuesday, spawning concerns that the high indebtedness is feared to weigh on the already weakening economic growth.

Local companies’ debt reached 107 percent of the country’s gross domestic product as of end-March, well hovering above a tipping point of 90 percent, according to the Korea Insurance Research Institute. In 2010, the ratio came in at 104 percent.

The corporate debt ratio fell to 78 percent in 2004 after the country fast pulled out of the 1997-98 Asian-wide financial crisis.

But the global financial crisis, driven by the collapse of Lehman Brothers, led the ratio to shoot up to 107 percent in 2008 and 110 percent in 2009.

The high debt level is seen as troubling because Asia’s fourth-largest economy is losing steam due to faltering exports and sluggish domestic demand, raising worries that corporate profitability is worsening, according to analysts.

The South Korean economy grew 0.4 percent in the second quarter from three months earlier. Exports, which account for about 50 percent of the economy, dropped 8.8 percent in July from a year earlier, the sharpest decline since September 2009.

According to the central bank, the ratio of listed firms’ debt to equity capital reached 101.2 percent as of end-March, up from 99.5 percent three months earlier, indicating that their financial health deteriorated.

The data came as South Korea is already being beset by growing household debt, which stood at 911.4 trillion won ($808.7 billion) as of the end of March.

The ratio of Korean households’ debt to GDP reached 81 percent as of the end of the first quarter, up from 80 percent at the end of last year. The ratio stayed below a threshold level of 85 percent, but many experts said that Korean households’ high indebtedness is one of the biggest drags on the economy.

The ratio of government debt to GDP stood at 33 percent as of end-March due to its efforts to keep fiscal health sound, up from 31 percent at the end of 2011, data showed.

The ratio stayed below an average of 100 percent in public debt held by member nations of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, it added. (Yonhap News)