On May 19, the South Korean government clarified its position regarding restrictions on personal cross-border e-commerce (direct overseas purchases), stating that reports about a complete ban on 80 categories of products without Korean safety certification were inaccurate. Lee Jung-hyun, Second Vice Minister of the Office for Government Policy Coordination, stated during a press briefing that a blanket ban on 80 product categories was neither practically feasible nor legally possible, and the government had never considered such a plan. Relevant authorities will conduct preemptive safety inspections on these 80 product categories, implementing bans only on harmful items.
Lee Jung-hyun emphasized that the South Korean government has no justification nor capability to prevent consumers from purchasing safe products through cross-border e-commerce. He stressed the governments commitment to conducting thorough safety inspections and disclosing results to ensure public safety. Korean Certification (KC) isnt the only solution for cross-border product safety, and the government will carefully consider various opinions before making decisions.
He also expressed regret over the confusion caused by the governments May 16 announcement titled Measures to Strengthen Cross-border E-commerce Consumer Safety and Corporate Competitiveness. The announcement, which stated an impending June ban on 80 uncertified product categories including 34 childrens products and 34 electrical/lifestyle items, was misinterpreted as a complete cross-border e-commerce ban, sparking widespread controversy.
Statistics Korea data released on May 1 shows South Koreas Q1 cross-border e-commerce transactions reached 1.6476 trillion won (≈8.77 billion RMB), a 9.4% YoY increase, setting a new quarterly record. Chinese imports saw particularly dramatic growth, reaching 938.4 billion won (up 53.9% YoY), accounting for 57% of total cross-border purchases - a 16.5 percentage point increase from 40.5% in the same period last year, marking the highest proportion since records began.
These figures reflect strong Korean consumer demand for cross-border shopping, particularly for Chinese goods known for their variety and affordability. The South Korean government must carefully consider these market trends and consumer preferences when formulating cross-border e-commerce policies.