At South Korea's fried chicken diners, palm oil squeeze feeds inflation fears

Published 2022년 4월 29일

Tridge summary

A cheap fried chicken shop, Mr Lee's diner, in central Seoul is considering raising prices for the first time in 15 years due to the impact of Indonesia's cooking oil export ban and the global surge in palm oil prices. This situation reflects the challenges for South Korean policymakers amid concerns of inflation, following a surprise interest rate hike, as the cost of various consumer goods, including cosmetics, is set to increase. The price of edible oil in South Korea has already doubled due to a steady global price rise, and the recent export ban has further disrupted the market, leading to significant price hikes in palm oil and other oils. This is expected to affect not just the price of chicken but also other products imported into South Korea, making it the largest importer of animal and vegetable fats and oils in 2021, with about 30% being palm oil, primarily from Indonesia and Malaysia.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

SEOUL (April 29): Mr Lee's diner, a cheap-and-cheerful fried chicken shop near central Seoul, has held firm against raising prices for a decade and a half. But now, Mr Lee says, Indonesia's cooking oil export ban and its costly squeeze on prices have been the last straw: he expects to follow larger chains of South Korea's ubiquitous "chimaek" fried chicken-and-beer outlets that are raising prices, even if he risks losing customers. Mr Lee's dilemma highlights the perilous path ahead for policymakers in Asia's fourth-largest economy, where worries over cost-push inflation prompted a surprise rate hike this month with both inflation rates and expectations at their highest in a decade. For a wide array of consumer goods using palm oil — from croissants to cosmetics — Indonesia's surprise moves over the past week to ban exports have sent shock waves globally, pushing up prices for palm oil from other sources such as Malaysia, and for substitutes like soy oil. "We are cautiously ...

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