South Korea is set to roll out a second batch of cash assistance for the bottom 70 per cent of income earners, in an effort to ease financial strains caused by rising fuel prices amid the war in the Middle East.
According to officials on Monday, the National Assembly has approved a 26.2 trillion-won (17.8 billion dollars) extra budget bill to address the economic fallout from the Middle East conflict, which includes the introduction of the cash assistance plan.
Under the first programme launched in April, the government handed out up to 600,000 won to recipients of basic livelihood security and other vulnerable groups.
The government will begin accepting applications next Monday for the second round of the assistance programme.
Eligible individuals living in the broader Seoul area will receive 100,000 won, while those in areas with declining populations may receive up to 250,000 won each.
Assistance eligibility will be determined by a household’s national health insurance payment in March this year. For single-person households, those who paid 130,000 won or less will be eligible.
In terms of annual income, a single-person household earning 43.4 million or less is expected to be eligible for assistance.
A welfare ministry official, however, noted that eligibility will be based on the national health insurance payment.
Also, about 930,000 households that held assets exceeding 1.2 billion won as of 2025 or earned more than 20 million won in financial income in 2024 will not be eligible for the programme, according to the official.
The government will accept applications for the cash assistance through July 3.
Recipients can receive the assistance through their credit and debit cards, prepaid cards, or local currency vouchers.
The funds, which will expire Aug. 31, can only be used at small local businesses with annual sales of 3 billion won or less.
Interior Minister Yun Ho-jung, in a briefing, said “the high-oil price support fund is expected to reduce the people’s burdens stemming from the prolonged war in the Middle East and revive dampened consumption’.
