25 February 2014 | 18:50

S. Korea's Park vows to rebalance export-led economy

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President of South Korea Park Geun-hye. ©Reuters/Denis Balibouse President of South Korea Park Geun-hye. ©Reuters/Denis Balibouse

South Korean President Park Geun-Hye unveiled Tuesday a three-year plan to rebalance the export-reliant economy, investing $3.7 billion on start-ups, boosting domestic spending and getting more young people and women in the workforce, AFP reports. Park said the plan -- announced on the day she completed her first year in office -- would deliver a potential economic growth rate of least four percent by 2017. "Our past... way of growth that made us one of the world's 10 largest economies has now reached its limit," Park said in a national televised speech. Asia's fourth-largest economy faces a widening imbalance with the export and manufacturing sector -- led by all-powerful conglomerates -- totally overshadowing the domestic consumer market and services industry, she said. She also highlighted the dangers posed by what she described as South Korea's "silent, looming disaster" -- its rapidly ageing population that threatens to slash the workforce and impose a heavy welfare cost. "Unless we change the fundamentals of the economy and break from the trap of slow growth, there will be no future for us," Park warned. The national economy grew 2.7 percent in 2013. According to the three-year plan, the government will spend four trillion won ($3.7 billion) by 2017 to help small start-ups and increase spending on research and development to the equivalent of five percent of the GDP, from the current four percent. It will also ease an array of regulations on five key service industries -- healthcare, education, finance, tourism and software. While opinion polls have shown a healthy approval rating for Park after hew first year in office, she scores far higher marks for her foreign policy than her handling of the economy. A series of surveys commissioned by leading newspapers have shown disapproval of her economic policy running at around 50 percent. One of the largest-circulation dailies, the Dong-A Ilbo, compared her economic team to "a student who is full of motivation but knows little about how to study and ends up being an underachiever". Park, South Korea's first woman president, came to office vowing more gender equality and her speech on Tuesday offered more childcare services for working mothers and incentives for companies that hire more women and young people. "All aspects of our economy, including domestic spending and exports, manufacturing and services, big conglomerates and small and medium firms and the capital city and the rest of the country, should show balanced growth so that all South Koreans will be able to enjoy fruits of growth," Park said.


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South Korean President Park Geun-Hye unveiled Tuesday a three-year plan to rebalance the export-reliant economy, investing $3.7 billion on start-ups, boosting domestic spending and getting more young people and women in the workforce, AFP reports. Park said the plan -- announced on the day she completed her first year in office -- would deliver a potential economic growth rate of least four percent by 2017. "Our past... way of growth that made us one of the world's 10 largest economies has now reached its limit," Park said in a national televised speech. Asia's fourth-largest economy faces a widening imbalance with the export and manufacturing sector -- led by all-powerful conglomerates -- totally overshadowing the domestic consumer market and services industry, she said. She also highlighted the dangers posed by what she described as South Korea's "silent, looming disaster" -- its rapidly ageing population that threatens to slash the workforce and impose a heavy welfare cost. "Unless we change the fundamentals of the economy and break from the trap of slow growth, there will be no future for us," Park warned. The national economy grew 2.7 percent in 2013. According to the three-year plan, the government will spend four trillion won ($3.7 billion) by 2017 to help small start-ups and increase spending on research and development to the equivalent of five percent of the GDP, from the current four percent. It will also ease an array of regulations on five key service industries -- healthcare, education, finance, tourism and software. While opinion polls have shown a healthy approval rating for Park after hew first year in office, she scores far higher marks for her foreign policy than her handling of the economy. A series of surveys commissioned by leading newspapers have shown disapproval of her economic policy running at around 50 percent. One of the largest-circulation dailies, the Dong-A Ilbo, compared her economic team to "a student who is full of motivation but knows little about how to study and ends up being an underachiever". Park, South Korea's first woman president, came to office vowing more gender equality and her speech on Tuesday offered more childcare services for working mothers and incentives for companies that hire more women and young people. "All aspects of our economy, including domestic spending and exports, manufacturing and services, big conglomerates and small and medium firms and the capital city and the rest of the country, should show balanced growth so that all South Koreans will be able to enjoy fruits of growth," Park said.
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