Korea - Quasi liquid liabilities

Quasi-liquid liabilities (% of GDP)

Quasi-liquid liabilities (% of GDP) in Korea was 65.77 as of 2005. Its highest value over the past 45 years was 79.05 in 2001, while its lowest value was 1.32 in 1960.

Definition: Quasi-liquid liabilities are the sum of currency and deposits in the central bank (M0), plus time and savings deposits, foreign currency transferable deposits, certificates of deposit, and securities repurchase agreements, plus travelers checks, foreign currency time deposits, commercial paper, and shares of mutual funds or market funds held by residents. They equal the M3 money supply less transferable deposits and electronic currency (M1).

Source: International Monetary Fund, International Financial Statistics and data files, and World Bank and OECD GDP estimates.

See also:

Year Value
1960 1.32
1961 2.10
1962 4.34
1963 3.84
1964 2.99
1965 5.08
1966 8.78
1967 13.03
1968 19.31
1969 24.61
1970 24.69
1971 25.32
1972 26.37
1973 26.79
1974 22.33
1975 21.15
1976 20.74
1977 22.24
1978 22.87
1979 22.72
1980 25.31
1981 27.06
1982 28.50
1983 27.74
1984 27.29
1985 29.84
1986 30.66
1987 33.95
1988 36.82
1989 42.83
1990 43.73
1991 43.23
1992 48.06
1993 53.46
1994 57.73
1995 60.00
1996 64.19
1997 68.24
1998 75.50
1999 77.33
2000 76.12
2001 79.05
2002 77.05
2003 75.44
2004 67.54
2005 65.77

Classification

Topic: Financial Sector Indicators

Sub-Topic: Monetary holdings (liabilities)