Oil price cap must remain a temporary emergency measure
![Fuel prices are displayed at a gas station near Pyeongtaek Port in Poseung-eup, Pyeongtaek, Gyeonggi, on March 12, as the government announced that a cap on petroleum prices will take effect from March 13. [NEWS1]](https://koreajoongangdaily.joins.com/data/photo/2026/03/13/d9e6e789-ae4f-4f92-a598-d8bd9c364389.jpg)
Fuel prices are displayed at a gas station near Pyeongtaek Port in Poseung-eup, Pyeongtaek, Gyeonggi, on March 12, as the government announced that a cap on petroleum prices will take effect from March 13. [NEWS1]
The government has decided to introduce a ceiling on petroleum prices starting Friday. It marks the first direct intervention in the oil market since Korea liberalized fuel prices in 1997, nearly three decades ago. Setting a price cap is an especially strong measure, one rarely used outside the oil shocks of the 1970s and 1980s.
The policy aims to ease inflationary pressure and reduce burdens on households as global oil prices surge. Yet it cannot serve as a fundamental solution. Given the significant side effects that may arise during implementation, the measure should remain strictly a short-term emergency step.
The proposal emerged only a week after President Lee Jae Myung instructed officials during a Cabinet meeting to examine the possibility. Extraordinary circumstances may indeed require extraordinary measures. Still, it is unclear whether the government carefully reviewed the advantages and risks of all available policy tools before choosing what has traditionally been considered a last resort.
Previous administrations typically responded to oil price volatility with measures such as fuel tax cuts, subsidies for vulnerable groups or releases from strategic reserves. Direct price controls can deliver immediate relief but they often bring serious distortions as well.
One immediate concern is the potential misallocation of resources. Artificially suppressing prices may weaken incentives to conserve energy during a supply shock. Demand could remain high even in times of scarcity while supply might contract as producers face lower returns.
The financial consequences are another issue. Losses incurred by refiners under a price cap would ultimately need to be compensated by government funds. If the policy continues for an extended period, fiscal burdens could grow.
Such a system may also raise fairness concerns. Large vehicles that consume more fuel would effectively receive greater subsidies, potentially benefiting higher-income drivers more than others.
There are also strategic considerations. With no clear indication of how long global oil prices may remain unstable, deploying such a powerful policy tool too early could limit the government’s options later. Once price intervention becomes an accepted response, similar demands could recur whenever oil prices fluctuate.
Since the government has already decided to implement the price ceiling, minimizing its side effects must become a priority. Detailed monitoring will be required along with a clear exit strategy.
At the same time policymakers should prepare for the possibility that energy market instability may persist. Encouraging the use of public transportation and other demand management measures could help reduce consumption.
Structural responses must also accelerate. Expanding alternative energy supply sources and strengthening long-term energy security will be essential if Korea hopes to avoid repeated reliance on emergency interventions.
This article was originally written in Korean and translated by a bilingual reporter with the help of generative AI tools. It was then edited by a native English-speaking editor. All AI-assisted translations are reviewed and refined by our newsroom.
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