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Bin bag panic grips South Korea as huge Iran war crisis budget agreed

· English· 南华早报

A cashier checks government-regulated bin bags at a checkout in Goyang, South Korea, on Monday.

South Korea’s energy minister has sought to ease fears over shortages of plastic rubbish bags.

Photo: AFP In Seoul last week, South Koreans were stripping shop shelves of plastic bin bags.

Not food, not medicine.

Bin bags.

Nearly 2.7 million of the city’s mandatory “pay-as-you-throw” bags were sold each day, almost five times the normal volume, as residents scrambled to stockpile what they feared might soon become scarce.

City by-laws mandate that the prepaid bags – made from naphtha, a petroleum derivative – be used to throw away household waste.

But with oil supplies under strain amid the near-total closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a nation that runs on Middle Eastern oil was worried about running out.

South Korea imports almost all of its oil, more than two-thirds of it from countries in the Persian Gulf.

That deep energy dependence has spooked investors, who have been dumping Korean stocks since the war on Iran broke out.

Currency dealers monitor exchange rates at the Hana Bank headquarters in Seoul on March 3.

South Korea’s won tumbled to its lowest level in 17 years this month.

Photo: AFP Earlier this month, the main benchmark Kospi index experienced its worst single-day drop in history, plummeting by more than 12 per cent.

The won has tumbled to its lowest level since the global financial crisis of 2008-09, briefly breaching 1,530 per US dollar in intraday trading on Tuesday – the first time it has traded in that range in 17 years – and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development has cut its 2026 growth forecast for the country by 0.4 percentage points to 1.7 per cent.

Seoul is responding to the shock with a sweeping fiscal response.

On Monday, the ruling Democratic Party and the main opposition People Power Party agreed to pass a 26.2 trillion won (US$17.3 billion) supplementary budget by April 10.

The funds are earmarked to stabilise supply chains and support small business owners, logistics and delivery workers, shop operators and young people. “We will process the supplementary budget at the fastest pace in history,” Democratic Party leader Jung Chung-rae told reporters, citing three converging threats: soaring oil prices, the weakening won and accelerating inflation.

Democratic Party floor leader Han Byung-do put it in starker terms. “The front line has now crossed the Strait of Hormuz and entered our factories’ front y

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