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Country starter pack<br />

Business practicalities in <strong>Korea</strong><br />

73<br />

While <strong>Korea</strong>’s unemployment rate has lately been among<br />

the lowest in the OECD, the labour market duality<br />

(including the high share of part-time/casual workers) and<br />

underemployment in some segments of the population<br />

(notably youth and women) are important challenges,<br />

and factors contributing to lower potential growth. Policy<br />

makers are therefore focused on:<br />

• Boosting female labour force participation<br />

• Policy revision<br />

• Raising youth employment.<br />

Human resources and employment law<br />

When employing workers in <strong>Korea</strong>, laws affecting the<br />

hiring, payment, and dismissal of workers must be<br />

observed. The Labour Law of <strong>Korea</strong> has been designed<br />

to provide workers with adequate protection, while<br />

protecting the basic structure of business activities and<br />

contributing to a solid and stable capitalist economy.<br />

The Labour Law is divided into four basic parts:<br />

individual labour relations, collective industrial relations,<br />

cooperative industrial relations, and employment. The<br />

laws set standards for labour contracts and relations<br />

between employers and workers, enable autonomous<br />

dispute resolution between labour and management by<br />

guaranteeing workers’ right to organise a union, and aim<br />

to ensure mutual benefits to labour and management<br />

by promoting the participation and cooperation of both<br />

employers and workers.<br />

Minimum conditions for employees are set out in<br />

the Labour Standards Act. Working hours, severance<br />

pay, health and safety, compensation for industrial<br />

accidents, and labour contracts are all covered by this<br />

act. The Employment Insurance Act grants benefits<br />

to jobless workers and aims to promote employment<br />

through improving employee skills and employability.<br />

Compensation and insurance coverage for industrial<br />

accidents is guaranteed in the Industrial Accident<br />

Compensation Insurance Act.<br />

The <strong>Korea</strong>n Gender Employment Equality Law prohibits<br />

gender discrimination against any worker, requiring that<br />

people doing the same work of equal value are to be paid<br />

at the same wage scale. An employer violating these<br />

provisions is subject to penalty.<br />

Under <strong>Korea</strong>’s Minimum Wage Law, mandatory minimum<br />

wage standards applicable to all firms in all industries<br />

are set and reviewed annually by the Minister of Labour.<br />

In 2014, the minimum wage was set at KRW 5210 per<br />

hour (up 7.2 per cent from 2013), KRW 41,680 per<br />

eight-hour day, and KRW 1,088,890 per month (based<br />

on a 40-hour week). Salary ranges for executives and<br />

professionals vary widely according to the industry, the<br />

company, and the seniority or position of the individual.<br />

There has been a continuing transition from seniority to<br />

performance-based pay systems.<br />

The average wage can also differ significantly across<br />

industries. For example, wages increased at an average<br />

annual rate of 4.6 per cent in the manufacturing industry<br />

between 2009 and 2014, compared with 3.3 per cent in<br />

financial services. The Government’s policies are broadly<br />

aimed at creating more equality between services and<br />

manufacturing, by increasing tax incentives for the former<br />

to the same level as in manufacturing.<br />

MINIMUM WAGE - Per hour<br />

2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014<br />

Minimum wage (KRW) 4,000 4,110 4,320 4,580 4,860 5,210<br />

Increase Rate % (year-on-year) 6.1 2.75 5.1 6.0 6.1 7.2<br />

Number of workers applied<br />

(thousand persons)<br />

15,882 16,103 16,479 17,048 17,510 17,734<br />

Source: OECD

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