Most Popular
-
1
Mass stabbing fears set off stampede in Seoul subway
-
2
Over 2,000 subway passengers injured in Seoul over 5 years
-
3
Opposition leader could face arrest as his fate hangs in balance
-
4
Parliament passes arrest motion against opposition leader, dismissal motion against PM
-
5
Yoon, UN chief reaffirm cooperation on NK denuclearization, human rights
-
6
Lamborghini driver suspect sent to prosecutors over parking dispute in Gangnam
-
7
No more hurdles for Korea's nuclear reactor exports?
-
8
[Top Envoy] ‘Don’t look back anymore’: former envoy on S. Korea-Japan thaw
-
9
[News Focus] What are the implications of Yoon naming Russia before NK?
-
10
Foreign virtual assets worth W131tr unveiled

South Korea's fiscal deficit increased 22.2 trillion won ($16.9 billion) in the first six months of this year from a year ago as the government revved up spending to tackle the fallout of the pandemic, data showed Thursday.
The managed fiscal balance, a key gauge of fiscal health calculated on a stricter term, posted a deficit of 101.9 trillion won in the January-June period, larger than a shortfall of 79.7 trillion won a year earlier, according to the finance ministry.
The increased deficit was mainly attributable to increased spending designed to support pandemic-hit merchants and vulnerable people under the record 62 trillion-won extra budget created in May.
The finance ministry said it aims to manage a yearly fiscal deficit at around 110.8 trillion won for 2022. The central government debt had amounted to 1,007.5 trillion won as of end-June, down 11.2 trillion won from the previous month, as it repaid maturing debt.
The Yoon Suk-yeol government plans to implement a belt-tightening policy in a shift from years of expansionary fiscal policy adopted by the previous Moon Jae-in administration in a bid to improve fiscal health.
To this end, the country plans to lower the fiscal deficit to a size equivalent to less than 3 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) over the next five years from the 5.1 percent estimate for this year.
The government also set the goal of reducing the debt-to-GDP ratio to around "the midpoint" of the 50 percent range by 2027. The estimated debt ratio for 2022 stands at 49.7 percent. (Yonhap)