South Korea Eyes Historic Economic Boom as Officials Push Property Tax Reform
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South Korea’s Economic Outlook: A Historic Boom or a Temporary Surge?
South Korea’s economic landscape is currently being described as a “historic boom” by Kim Yong-beom, the presidential chief of staff for policy. On June 20, he highlighted that while the economy is experiencing significant growth, it is also necessary to adjust property taxes and capital gains taxes as part of normalizing real estate taxation.
In a 40-page manuscript titled ‘The Joy, Strangeness, and Fear of a Nominal Economy in the High 10% Range’ published on Facebook, Senior Secretary Kim noted that several key economic indicators are showing positive trends. He stated, “Stock prices, operating profits, tax revenues, and the current account balance—all these figures are pointing in a good direction. This boom is not an illusion but the real deal.” Kim added that South Korea’s nominal GDP growth rate is expected to exceed double digits this year.
He further explained that luxury consumption may revive in the second half of the year, and real estate buying sentiment in preferred areas could begin to stir again. However, he warned that the real test will come during year-end and early next year. “Once bonuses are paid, wage increases materialize, and export proceeds start flowing into the domestic market, people’s behavior changes. Looking back, such money has repeatedly flowed into the real estate market.”
The Need for Normalized Real Estate Taxation
Senior Secretary Kim emphasized the importance of normalizing real estate taxation. He argued that reasonably adjusting property taxes and capital gains taxes is necessary and the right direction. “If people are convinced that real estate remains profitable even after taxes, even strict regulations may prove insufficient,” he said. This statement is seen as suggesting potential tax hikes in the future.
He also raised concerns about the concentration of wealth. “If the national wealth earned from semiconductors is absorbed as unearned real estate income and the fruits of growth are concentrated among a few, this boom will not last long,” Kim warned. Conversely, he suggested that if fiscal capacity and corporate profits can be channeled toward youth, vulnerable groups, and future industries, this boom could mark South Korea’s exit from the long-standing low-growth tunnel.
Kim stressed that a historic boom demands imagination commensurate with its scale and the execution power to turn that imagination into reality.
Proposals for a National Dividend System
Earlier last month, Senior Secretary Kim also proposed a “national dividend system” to return excess tax revenue to citizens. He stated, “The fruits of the AI infrastructure era are not solely the result of specific companies.” This idea aims to distribute the benefits of economic growth more broadly across society.
- Author: Editorial Daily News Lite

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