*

East Asia Econ

The platform for tracking and understanding East Asia macro

Latest analysis

Korea – wage growth still slowing, floor should be close

Korea – wage growth still slowing, floor should be close

The breakdown of income in the detailed Q2 GDP data shows the labour share falling, but remaining well above the pre-covid level. That implies wage growth has slowed to a bit over 2%. Bottom-up wage data for June look similar. A floor is probably close, but there's no sign of a re-acceleration yet.

2 min read

Korea – no change in underlying CPI

Korea – no change in underlying CPI

Two shocks affected CPI in August: bad weather that pushed food prices up, and big cuts in mobile phone bills. The latter impact was bigger. Excluding all that and core remains around 2%, and the BOK expects that to continue. I would have expected more downside risk, but there's no sign of that yet.

2 min read

China – will deflation end?

China – will deflation end?

My latest video discussing the inflation outlook. Apart from the anti-involution drive, the stabilisation of demand deposits and property do ease the downwards pressure on prices. But the weakness of aggregate demand remains, and as yesterday's PMI suggested, the outlook for prices remains subdued.

1 min read

Korea – exports ok, PMI weak

Korea – exports ok, PMI weak

Full-month exports in August were firm, but that still leaves growth in single digits, and neither data nor commentary from the business sentiment surveys suggest that is about to change. Indeed, today's August PMI remained well below 50, and reported a "sharp decrease in incoming business inflows".

2 min read

Japan – labour share rebounds

Japan – labour share rebounds

The Q2 rise in the labour share promises support for consumption, but without yet depressing profits. Manufacturing earnings did drop in Q2, and that questions the sustainability of capex. But IT investment was also strong, and the PMI suggests that overall, manufacturing is coping with tariffs.

3 min read

Last week, next week

Last week, next week

China's structural downturn since 2021 has likely bottomed. But I think real recovery is needed for a further rally in equities. Japan's growth and inflation have survived the tariff hit, putting the BOJ back in play. For Korea, I am questioning the BOK's outlook for inflation and thus rates.

5 min read

China – a weak nominal upturn

China – a weak nominal upturn

While the PMIs don't point to any real improvement, in nominal terms there's been a lift, with input prices above 50 again. That's in line with the credit impulse. But the credit impulse might already have turned, and while PPI deflation has lessened, output prices don't suggest stronger CPI.

2 min read

Japan – UE falls to post-covid low

Japan – UE falls to post-covid low

The fall in the UE rate in July to 2.3% isn't substantively important. The mechanics behind it were more noteworthy, in particular a ticking down in the part rate. Other data today show a softening of inflation in Tokyo in August, and nationwide retail sales falling to the lowest level in 2 years.

3 min read

Korea – on hold, but not done

Korea – on hold, but not done

The BOK didn't change rates today. It did note signs of cycle improvement, a sense reinforced by separate labour market data reported today. But it only raised its GDP forecast by 0.1ppt, one member voted for a cut, and the governor said the easing stance was likely to persist through 1H26.

2 min read

Korea – structure, cycle, and financial imbalances

Korea – structure, cycle, and financial imbalances

Slightly in advance of the BOK meeting tomorrow, a review of the economy and policy. My base case is the bank ends up cutting below 2%, because cycle stabilisation is tentative, and structural downside risks loom large. In monitoring that, my key indicators are business sentiment and services CPI.

6 min read

Summary charts