KEY POINTS
  • South Korea has drafted the most aggressive budget spending plan since the 2008-2009 global financial crisis for next year as its trade-reliant economy is buffeted by growing economic threats both at home and from abroad.
  • The ministry said in a statement budget spending would be increased sharply for welfare, job creation, small businesses, environment and research-and-development projects.
A South Korean national flag (left) and a Bank of Korea flag fly outside the central bank's headquarters in South Korea, on January 15, 2015.

South Korea has drafted the most aggressive budget spending plan since the 2008-2009 global financial crisis for next year as its trade-reliant economy is buffeted by growing economic threats both at home and from abroad. 

The finance ministry said on Thursday it would propose to parliament a budget bill of 513.5 trillion won ($423.45 billion)
for next year, up 8.0% from this year when including the extra budget for 2019, and up 9.3% excluding it.