Special Report: Global Financial Crisis
SEOUL, Jan. 8 (Xinhua)-- South Korean President Lee
Myung-bak said on Thursday the country's real economy might fall in stagnation
and ordered the government to take preemptive measures against economic
slowdown.
"It is highly possible that the real economy could
begin to stagnate full-scale from now on, so we need to take more thorough and
preemptive countermeasures," the president was quoted as saying by his
spokesman, Lee Dong-kwan.
Lee convened the first meeting of the Emergency
Economy Management Council, which was set up under a government effort to
stabilize the crisis-stricken economy, on Thursday.
South Korea's Ministry of Strategy and Finance said
on Thursday at a report that the country's economy is facing an increasing risk
of sliding into recession as exports slump and domestic demand weakens amid
global economic slowdown.
"Despite easing inflationary pressures, South Korea
faces increased risk of recession as many real economic indicators are
worsening, including slumping production, anemic domestic demand and exports,"
the ministry said at the monthly report.
The report showed that exports and domestic demand
are slowing at a faster-than-expected pace, weighing on production activities in
the local manufacturing sector.
According to the ministry, South Korea's exports
plunged 17.4 percent in December from a year earlier while the contraction is
expected to accelerate in January amid intensifying global recession woes.
With weakening domestic demand and exports,
industrial production plunged to an all-time low in November, with output
contracting 14.1 percent from a year earlier, it said.
