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Why stock wealth effect on consumption is weaker in Korea than in US, Europe | Collector
Why stock wealth effect on consumption is weaker in Korea than in US, Europe
The Korea Times

Why stock wealth effect on consumption is weaker in Korea than in US, Europe

Stock market gains in Korea lead to less consumer spending than in the United States and Europe, largely because local households tend to use investment returns to purchase homes rather than spend on goods and services, a central bank report showed Thursday. According to a Bank of Korea (BOK) report on the wealth effect of stock market gains, only about 1.3 percent of capital gains from rising stock prices are spent on consumption in Korea, far below the 3 to 4 percent wealth effect typically seen in advanced Western economies. Based on household panel data covering 2012 to 2024, the BOK estimated that a 10,000 won ($7) increase in stock value leads to just 130 won in additional household spending. One reason for the weaker wealth effect is the relatively small role those equities play in household wealth compared with Western economies. Stock assets amounted to 77 percent of disposable income in Korea last year, sharply lower than 256 percent in the U.S. and 184 percent in major European countries, the report said. Another factor is retail investors' tendency to reinvest stock gains into

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