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One of the many negative factors that shake up the financial market as you hear it is Japan's economic retaliation. Of course, there may be an impact on our economy to some extent, but there is an analysis that it does not need to worry too much or worry about the situation right now. That's what Abe is about.

Reporter Park Min-ha will tell you this.

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The report by Goldman Sachs, a global investment bank, was made by the Japanese government on June 2, when it decided to exclude Korea from whitelisting.

"The decision to exclude Japan's whitelist will not lead to embargo, either to ban exports or to sharply reduce exports."

Even if it is excluded from the whitelist, it is possible to import the same as before by utilizing the "special general license" of a company certified by the Japanese government.

However, it is not possible to exclude the possibility of further measures by the Japanese government to make export control more stringent, and that such risks and uncertainties can put pressure on Korean private sector investment over the next few years.

The government gave similar recognition.

A high-ranking government official said, "The impact of direct export reductions from Japan's export regulations is limited, and the Japanese government's real intention is market uncertainty and corporate and public anxiety."

He also said, "It is sucked into the will of Abe administration to amplify the uncertainty of Japan's measures."

It is true that it faced a difficult environment both inside and outside the country, including the US-China trade conflict and the sluggish profit prospects of Korean companies, which are spread by the currency war, but it is interpreted as meaning that there is no need to criticize or interpret the Japanese measures.

(Image editing: Kim, Sunck, VJ: Jung, Min-koo)