The South Korean economy grew by a six-year low of 2.7 percent last year due to sluggish corporate investment, but its per capita income surpassed US$30,000 for the first time, preliminary data by the central bank showed Tuesday.

The revised 2018 reading by the Bank of Korea (BOK) is on par with its earlier estimate of 2.7 percent growth released in January.

But it is the slowest on-year gain since 2012, when the country pulled off 2.3 percent annual growth.

For the fourth quarter of 2018, the economy rose 1 percent from three months earlier, jumping from a 0.6 percent on-quarter gain in both the second and third quarters.

In nominal terms, gross domestic product gained a 20-year low of 3.0 percent on-year to $1.62 trillion last year.


South Korea's per capita gross national income, a gauge of the population's purchasing power, reached $31,349 last year, up 2.5 percent from the $29,745 tallied in 2017.

It took 12 years for Asia's fourth-largest economy to achieve the feat after it first touched the $20,000 line in 2006.

Based on available 2017 data, South Korea, which has a population of 50 million, ranked 11th in terms of per capita GNI among countries with 20 million or more people. The United States tops the list with $58,000, followed by Australia with $51,000, the Netherlands $46,000 and Germany with $43,000.

"A country with $30,000 in per capita GNI is considered an advanced nation," Shin Seung-cheol, director of the national accounts division at the BOK, said in a briefing. "South Korea has pulled off remarkable economic growth since the Korean War."

If South Korea grows 2.7 percent every year, it may take around 10 years to join the club of $40,000 per capita GNI, with population growth, foreign exchange rates and inflation remaining steady, he noted.

On GDP growth, facility investment fell to a nine-year low of 1.6 percent last year as cooling global demand for semiconductors discouraged companies from expanding their factory lines.

Construction investment tumbled 4 percent as the Seoul government has been making efforts to calm down the overheated housing market. The 4 percent drop marked the sharpest contraction since 1998, when the sector plunged 13.3 percent amid the Asian financial crisis.

Private spending rose 2.8 percent, the highest in seven years, while government spending jumped by an 11-year high of 5.6 percent in 2018 on its efforts to prop up the economy.

Exports, which account for around 50 percent of the GDP, rose 4.2 percent, up from a 1.9 percent increase in 2017, while growth in imports slowed down to 1.7 percent from 7 percent.

By production, the central bank said the manufacturing industry rose 3.6 percent last year, down from 4.4 percent a year ago.

The construction sector retreated 4.2 percent, marking the first negative growth since 2012, while services rose 2.8 percent in 2018.

The gross savings ratio fell 1.4 percentage points to 34.8 percent last year, hitting the lowest percentage in four years, while the country's gross domestic investment ratio edged down 0.8 percentage point to 30.4 percent last year.

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