S. Korea Affirms Next Year's Minimum Wage as Earlier Set | Be Korea-savvy

S. Korea Affirms Next Year’s Minimum Wage as Earlier Set


The result of a vote for the minimum wage for next year at a meeting of the Minimum Wage Commission held in the administrative capital of Sejong. South Korea on Jul. 12, 2019. (Yonhap)

The result of a vote for the minimum wage for next year at a meeting of the Minimum Wage Commission held in the administrative capital of Sejong. South Korea on Jul. 12, 2019. (Yonhap)

SEOUL, Aug. 5 (Korea Bizwire)The government announced Monday that the 2020 minimum wage will be set at 8,590 won (US$7.16) per hour as earlier decided as it has rejected a call for more deliberation by the labor sector.

The labor ministry posted next year’s minimum wage in a publication in the government’s official gazette, adding the hourly pay will be uniformly applied to all workplaces starting Jan. 1.

In July, the Minimum Wage Commission, involving labor and business representatives and experts, decided to raise the minimum wage for next year by 2.9 percent, the slowest growth in a decade, amid an economic slowdown and sluggish job market.

The growth rate sharply slowed from a 10.9 percent rise for 2019 and is the slowest gain since the minimum wage for 2010 rose 2.8 percent.

The labor sector has vehemently protested the wage decision and asked the labor minister to launch the process needed to review it.

If either labor or business takes issue with a wage decision, the labor minister can ask the panel to deliberate more on it when the policymaker sees reasonable grounds for review.

The ministry’s announcement was widely expected as the government has never called for the wage council to review a wage decision over the past 30 years.

A hike in the minimum wage is intended to increase income and consumption, and prop up the economic growth under President Moon Jae-in’s signature income-driven growth policy.

In his election pledges, Moon vowed to raise the threshold to 10,000 won by 2020.

But smaller firms and mom-and-pop stores responded to sharp hikes in the wage by dismissing part-time workers, thereby hampering job growth.

The labor sector angrily reacted to the 2020 wage decision, claiming that Moon’s failure to keep his promise means the government has ditched its income-driven growth policy.

Vice Labor Minister Im Seo-jeong expressed regret that the decision fell short of the labor circle’s expectations, vowing the government’s efforts to support low income workers and ease financial troubles facing smaller firms.

He defended the government’s decision to set the minimum wage as earlier approved by the panel.

“There were no procedural flaws in the panel’s (decision-making) process such as deliberation and approval. The government also judged that the council kept its independence and neutrality in making a decision within its authority,” Im told a press briefing in the administrative city of Sejong.

(Yonhap)

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