Special Report: Global Financial Crisis
SEOUL, Oct. 19 (Xinhua) -- The South Korean government on
Sunday officially announced that it will provide 100 billion-U.S. dollar state
guarantees on foreign debts to be raised by local banks.
"As other major economies start providing guarantees
to inter-bank loans, the South Korean government will take similar measures to
avoid placing domestic banks at a relative disadvantage in terms of overseas
funding and to allay fears in the financial markets," said a statement jointly
issued by chiefs of the Finance Ministry, the Bank of Korea and the Financial
Services Commission.
"The government will pursue market stabilization
policies in a preemptive, decisive and sufficient manner to minimize the total
cost of implementing the proposed measures," the statement said.
The decision was regarded as an efforts to ease the
dollar shortage in the local financial sector and to revive market confidence.
According to the statement, 30 billion U.S. dollars
will be provided "as soon as possible" to local banks and exporters by using the
country's foreign reserve holdings. The government announced earlier that it
will provide 15 billion U.S. dollars to its financial system.
The state guarantees will be applied immediately from
Monday for three years on foreign debts to be raised until June 30, 2009,the
government said.
Until it obtains parliamentary approval, the
guarantees will be provided by the state-run Korea Development Bank and the
Export-Import Bank of Korea, it added.
In a related move, the government said that it will
offer tax incentives for long-term holdings of funds, a move that it expects
will help strengthen stability of the stock markets, which are undergoing a
roller-coaster session, sparking fears over capital outflow, South Korea's
Yonhap News Agency reported.
The South Korean government also stressed that it
will seek closer cooperation with other countries to cope with the financial
turmoil.
"The government will not only promote multinational
collaboration among group of 20 industrialized countries, but also reinforce the
regional ties centered on South Korea, China and Japan," the statement said.