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China-Japan-Koreas
S Korea considers re-denomination of won
2004-01-16
Not directly about WOT, but the trade and currency issues are tied closely to other state-state relations.
South Korea is considering a radical overhaul of its currency, the won, including re-denomination and the issuing of higher-value banknotes. The measures, proposed by the head of the country’s central bank this week, are designed to make one of the world’s most unwieldy currencies more user-friendly. But critics say the scheme would encourage corruption and fuel inflation. Park Seung, governor of the Bank of Korea, said the country’s economy had outgrown its currency, leaving people’s wallets stuffed with banknotes that had too many digits but not enough value. South Korea’s highest-denominated banknote is worth Won10,000, equivalent to just $8.40, meaning people must carry thick wads of cash to fund large transactions.

Mr Park proposed the introduction of a note worth Won100,000 and called for the currency’s denomination to be cut by a factor of up to 1,000, meaning that a Won10,000 note would become a more manageable Won10. South Korea’s economy has grown by 100 times and prices have increased 11-fold since the Won10,000 note was first printed three decades ago, making re-denomination inevitable, according to Mr Park. He said a firm plan for the reforms would be finalised before the end of 2003 with the process likely to take several years to implement.

However, Roh Moo-hyun, South Korea’s president, said talks about the plan had not started and no decision had been made, suggesting a rift with the central bank. Mr Roh’s caution could reflect uncertainty about the popularity of plans to meddle with people’s money ahead of April’s crucial parliamentary elections. Critics say the introduction of higher-value banknotes would increase corruption because bigger bribes could be paid using fewer notes. Concern about graft is one of the reasons South Korea has always limited the value of its banknotes, reasoning that it is difficult to pay large bribes in Won10,000 notes.

Supporters of re-denomination argue there are better ways to tackle corruption than limiting the value of banknotes, pointing out that graft remains rampant in South Korea despite the restriction. It emerged last year that LG Group, South Korea’s second-largest conglomerate, delivered Won15,000bn to its favoured political party in the run-up to the 2002 presidential election, using a truck stuffed with 1.5bn of the country’s largest banknote.

Another concern is the psychological impact of re-denomination on a country where almost everyone can currently call themselves millionaires. Some critics believe the chopping off of a few zeroes from the price of goods would encourage excessive spending, while others fear people would be alarmed by having digits stripped off their savings. Other risks include inflation caused by vendors using re-denomination to hide price increases – although fear of this phenomenon proved unfounded when the European single currency was introduced two years ago
Posted by:rkb

#2  Agreed. What is interesting is the timing, given that Roh has pushed out a high-level pro-US minister this week.
Posted by: rkb   2004-1-16 1:23:05 PM  

#1  Note:this has no real bearing on the exchange rate.Lots of countries have changed their denomination in the past when their currencies have become impractical.
Posted by: El Id   2004-1-16 12:03:08 PM  

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