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‘Uncertainty’ leading businesses to postpone investment: poll

Apartments in Seoul. (Yonhap)
Apartments in Seoul. (Yonhap)
About half of the highest-earning South Korean companies have no investment plans for next year as they battle “uncertainty” around the omicron coronavirus variant and the disruptions the pandemic has caused, a local think tank said Monday.

According to the Korea Economic Research Institute, 49 percent of the 101 companies that responded to the survey said they either do not plan to make new investments in 2022 or have yet to come up with one, citing an uncertain economic outlook.

Fifty percent of the respondents said they have a plan for next year but only 31 percent of them said they would expand investments made this year.

“The omicron variant is one of many factors that adds to uncertainty. These firms had already cut their investment up until the third quarter roughly 63 percent on-year,” the KERI said.

Choo Kwang-ho, head of the economic policy department at the KERI, said the Korean government should help businesses ride out the pandemic-caused disruptions as the Bank of Korea looks to lift the rate again early next year.

“A rate hike is unavoidable, given the US Fed’s sooner-than-expected tapering and inflation we see here. But a hike would drag down business sentiment, which the government could offset by providing them with more incentives to invest and less intervention,” Choo said.

Choo said the government should not compel businesses to adopt a specific type of governance structure it believes is best or to put brakes on finding more flexibility in hiring and firing workers. The survey found regulations on labor practices the biggest obstacle hampering investment.

Regulations banning big corporations from competing with small businesses trying to defend their market share should also be lifted to encourage investment, said Lee Sang-ho, head of the economic policy team at KERI. 

The used-car market, one of 110 sectors that the government says needs the ban in order to protect the interests of small businesses, is the most glaring example of an “overly protected” market, according to Lee.

“It’s time to rethink what the ban has brought to small businesses for the last decade. Has it raised their competitiveness? Has it delivered the greater good to consumers? For all I know, the answer is no,” Lee said.

Last year, about 54 percent of entire deals on second hand cars were made without dealers, according to the Korea Automobile Manufacturers Association. Many Koreans have accused used-car dealers of fraudulent transactions, complaining of limited competition in the market.

Meanwhile, half the firms surveyed by the KERI said the economic condition next year would match this year’s, with 16 percent of them saying conditions would get worse in 2021.

By Choi Si-young (siyoungchoi@heraldcorp.com)
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