South Korea’s central bank just blinked first. The Bank of Korea raised its base rate by 25 basis points to 2.75% at its July 16 Monetary Policy Board meeting, marking the first rate increase the institution has delivered in roughly three years.

Why now, and why it matters

Inflation is the short answer. South Korea’s Consumer Price Index hit 3.2% in June 2026, which is the fourth consecutive month it has overshot the BOK’s stated target of 2%.

Governor Shin Hyun-song, who took office in 2026, has leaned into a noticeably more hawkish tone since stepping into the role. The May 2026 meeting offered an early preview of the internal tension, with two dissenting board members pushing for an immediate hike while the majority opted to hold at 2.5%. That minority view just became official policy.

GDP growth projections are tracking at 2.6%. A majority of economists surveyed by Reuters now expect a further increase to 3% before the end of 2026. The BOK itself has left the door open for additional moves, framing any future decisions as dependent on incoming economic data.