Korea to intensify credit card supervision
South Korea's Financial Supervisory Service is tightening supervision of credit card companies on worries that their easy loans may lead to default crises.
Rising card loans and cash advances issued by credit card companies, which are mounting a heated competition to outgrow each other, are cited by many policymakers and experts as a major economic risk that can result in massive growth in household debts and loan delinquencies.
The financial regulator plans to set up a new division tasked with supervising and inspecting credit card companies in its looming reshuffle and will almost double the workforce for that task, the regulator said.
The decision comes as part of the regulator's expansion of inspection forces aimed at preempting a rise in credit card firms' risky loans issued mostly to borrowers with low creditworthiness.
"The FSS will preemptively respond to prevent further expansion of credit card firms' small-amount credit loans," an FSS official said.
Loans issued through credit cards jumped 19 percent last year, far outperforming the entire financial sector, whose lending grew an average of 6.3 percent, the official said.
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