Governments never seem to learn from history. Every time energy prices surge, politicians rush to impose price controls as if markets can be commanded to obey political decrees. South Korea has now joined that long list, announcing it will impose a fuel price cap for the first time in nearly 30 years as global oil prices surge due to the escalating Middle East conflict.
Crude oil has already pushed above $100 per barrel, with Brent briefly approaching $119 during the latest escalation surrounding Iran. For an economy like South Korea, which imports roughly 70% of its oil from the Middle East, the impact is immediate and severe. When the region supplying the majority of your energy enters a war cycle, the consequences ripple instantly through fuel markets, currencies, and financial assets.
President Lee Jae Myung said the government would swiftly introduce a price cap on petroleum products to protect consumers and shield the economy from the energy shock. At the same time, authorities are considering expanding a market stabilization program of roughly 100 trillion won, or about $67 billion, to contain the financial fallout from rising energy prices.
South Korea’s benchmark KOSPI index fell about 6% as investors reacted to the oil shock. The Korean won weakened toward 1,500 per dollar and bond yields pushed to two-year highs as energy costs surged across the region. Gasoline prices in Seoul have already climbed above 1,900 won per liter and have continued rising toward roughly 1,945 won in only a matter of days.
Price controls never solve the underlying problem. They simply move the cost somewhere else. Either governments subsidize the difference, which expands fiscal deficits, or shortages begin to appear because suppliers have no incentive to sell at artificially suppressed prices. The United States tried the same approach during the 1970s energy crisis, and the result was not cheap fuel but long lines at gas stations.
The deeper issue is that this energy shock is not simply a temporary spike. Roughly 20% of the world’s oil supply moves through the Strait of Hormuz, and any conflict threatening that route immediately raises global supply risk. Markets price that risk long before governments acknowledge it.
South Korea’s move highlights the vulnerability of modern economies to energy disruptions. Nations dependent on imported fuel cannot control global oil markets with administrative policies. Price caps cannot create supply that does not exist. They simply hide the inflation temporarily while the real pressures build beneath the surface. When governments begin discussing price controls and emergency stabilization funds, history suggests the crisis is only beginning rather than ending.
