Early Warning Systems in the Republic of Korea: Experiences, Lessons, and Future Steps
Jung, Hyungmin; Jeong, Hoe Yun | March 2011
Abstract
This paper examines the cases of the Early Warning System (EWS) in the Republic of
Korea, which was introduced in the wake of 1997/98 Asian financial crisis in a policy
effort to prevent its recurrence. The EWS in the Republic of Korea was expanded into a
national system in 2005 incorporating the finance, real estate, commodities, and labor
sectors. This paper provides the descriptions of each EWS sector and documents
several episodes of their policy contributions. The past experiences suggest that
quantitative models tend to have difficulty predicting a crisis due to the changing nature
of crises. Hence, it is desirable that quantitative models are supplemented by qualitative
analysis reinforcing EWSs with various methodologies. To improve economic
surveillance and message delivery to guide proper policy actions, the independence of
surveillance unit should be maintained and the scope of monitoring should be expanded
to incorporate regions and markets other than domestic ones given the growing
influences of the external sector on the domestic economy through trade and financial
linkages.
Citation
Jung, Hyungmin; Jeong, Hoe Yun. 2011. Early Warning Systems in the Republic of Korea: Experiences, Lessons, and Future Steps. © Asian Development Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/11540/2035. License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.Keywords
Economic Crisis
Economic Efficiency
Economic Policies
Regional Economic Development
Job Evaluation
Evaluation
Crisis
Unemployment
Economic cooperation
Gross domestic product
Employment
Economic forecast
Financial crisis
Labor economics
Regional economics
Turnover
Economic survey
Job analysis
Labor turnover
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Citable URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11540/2035Metadata
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