President Lee Jae-myung is preparing to wield one of the most potent tools in the South Korean constitutional toolkit, signaling that the ongoing energy crisis triggered by prolonged conflict in the Middle East has reached a threshold requiring executive emergency powers. During a State Council meeting on March 31, Lee warned that if the situation deteriorates further, the government may invoke Emergency Financial and Economic Orders—a measure reserved for national crises where legislative deliberation is too slow to prevent catastrophe.
The statement marks a significant escalation in Seoul’s response to what the President described as a situation severe enough to retain him awake at night. With international crude prices soaring and navigation threats expanding from the Strait of Hormuz to the Red Sea, the administration is moving to secure supply chains before domestic inflation spirals out of control. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) has already revised South Korea’s economic growth forecast downward from 2.1% to 1.7%, reflecting the tangible impact of external shocks on an economy heavily dependent on imported energy.
The Weight of Emergency Powers
Lee’s reference to emergency orders is not casual rhetoric. Under the South Korean Constitution, the President can issue these orders only in cases of internal or external turmoil, natural disaster, or major financial crisis where waiting for the National Assembly to convene would compromise national security or public order. Since democratization, this authority has been exercised exactly once: in 1993, when the Kim Young-sam administration implemented the financial real-name system to stabilize the banking sector.
The hesitation to use this power stems from its democratic implications. Emergency orders bypass the legislature, a significant deviation from normal governance. However, the administration appears concerned that the upcoming June 3 local elections could paralyze legislative function, leaving the executive branch as the only entity capable of swift action. Lee emphasized that while the government prefers standard legislative processes, the severity of the energy supply disruption may leave no other choice.
Securing Critical Materials
Beyond the constitutional warnings, the government has already begun concrete steps to control resource distribution. Starting last week, emergency supply adjustments were implemented for naphtha, a critical feedstock for the petrochemical industry. The President ordered that urea, helium, and aluminum be managed with the same strictness as wartime materials. This mirrors measures taken during the pandemic when the government controlled mask distribution to prevent shortages and price gouging.

Lee framed these disruptions as a catalyst for long-term structural change. He argued that continuing to rely on fossil fuels leaves the nation vulnerable to geopolitical volatility regardless of diplomatic efforts. The administration is now accelerating plans for a renewable energy transition, including targeted support for electric vehicle purchases in regions with high renewable energy production. The goal is to decouple economic stability from the instability of Middle Eastern supply lines.
Cracking Down on Economic Rumors
Perhaps the most contentious element of the President’s directive is the crackdown on misinformation. Lee labeled the spread of economic anxiety through false rumors as a “serious crime” equivalent to obstructing national crisis management. Specific attention was drawn to online claims regarding trash bag price hikes and oil smuggling.
Addressing rumors that production cost increases would double trash bag prices, Lee noted the actual impact would be negligible—roughly 5 to 10 won per unit—and asserted that inventory levels remain sufficient. More seriously, he debunked claims that 900,000 barrels of oil destined for Vietnam were being diverted to North Korea via Ulsan. He clarified that the shipment was legitimately purchased by Vietnam and characterized the smuggling narrative as malicious fabrication designed to undermine public confidence.
Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan confirmed that the government has filed criminal complaints against operators of three YouTube channels—’Jeon Han-gil News’, ‘Jeolla-do U-turn’, and ‘TV Liberty Daily’—citing charges of defamation and business obstruction under the Criminal Act and the Act on Promotion of Information and Communications Network Utilization. The Minister stated that all available legal measures, including criminal prosecution, would be used against hoarding and rumor-mongering that harms the community.
What triggers the use of Emergency Financial Orders?
The Constitution permits these orders only when there is an urgent need to maintain national security or public order during internal or external turmoil, natural disaster, or major financial crisis, and there is no time to wait for the National Assembly to convene.
Why is the government targeting social media channels now?
< p>The administration believes false rumors about resource shortages and price hikes are exacerbating economic instability. By prosecuting specific channels, they aim to deter panic buying and maintain confidence in the supply chain during a volatile period.How does this affect the economic growth forecast?
The OECD has already adjusted South Korea’s growth forecast down to 1.7% from 2.1% due to the energy crisis. Emergency measures are intended to prevent further degradation of this outlook by stabilizing supply chains and curbing inflationary panic.
As the government walks the line between necessary emergency action and democratic norms, the coming weeks will test whether swift executive power can stabilize the market without eroding public trust.





