KEY POINTS
  • South Korean finance minister Choo Kyung-ho says capital outflows do not take place on account of a single economic driver as investors are also swayed by other factors.
  • Capital outflows occur when assets and money leave one country for another due to better investment returns, such as higher interest rates.
  • Still, Choo acknowledged that the Fed's aggressive interest rate hikes is cause for concern as a growing difference in borrowing costs between the U.S. and South Korea could accelerate capital flows down the road.

BALI, Indonesia — South Korea's finance minister has shrugged off short-term risks of capital outflows from the Asian economy as gaps in global rates widen. 

Speaking to CNBC at the Group of 20 meeting in Bali, Choo Kyung-ho said capital outflows from a country don't take place as a result of a single economic driver — such as interest rate gaps — since investors are also swayed by other factors, like the strength of an economy.