• Title/Summary/Keyword: 초단시간 근로자

Search Result 2, Processing Time 0.019 seconds

The Short-Hours Part-Time Jobs in Korea (한국의 초단시간 노동시장 분석)

  • Moon, Ji-Sun;Kim, Young-Mi
    • Korean Journal of Labor Studies
    • /
    • v.23 no.1
    • /
    • pp.129-164
    • /
    • 2017
  • This article is an exploratory study on the recent growth of short-hours part-time work in Korea. The short-hours part-time work has been rapidly growing among low-educated women over sixty, particularly among bereaved or divorced women, contrary to the expectation of the government that encouraged the part-time work by means of work-family balance for working mothers or middle-aged women who experienced career interruption. The short-hours part-time jobs are concentrated in social service industry, mostly elderly care service jobs, and their working conditions are extremely poor, mostly low-wage jobs with no social insurances except for health insurance. In this study, we discuss why the short-hours part-time work has grown so fast in Korea since the mid 2000s. Using various governmental statistics, we examine the effects of the labor demand and supply situations during the time period, the legal context that is related with the exempt clause of the labor law, and the institutional context related with the government's public job creation projects for the elderly. We suggest some public policies needed to slow down the growth of the short-hours part-time jobs and to elevate their working conditions.

The Effect of the Minimum Wage Increment on Employment and Work-hour of New Workers in Korea (최저임금 인상이 신규근로자 고용과 근로시간에 미치는 영향)

  • Lee, Kyungho;Kim, Ji Hwan;Choi, Jihoon
    • Journal of Labour Economics
    • /
    • v.42 no.2
    • /
    • pp.63-99
    • /
    • 2019
  • This paper estimates the effect of the minimum wage increment on employment and work-hour of new workers in Korea using the data from the Survey on Labor Conditions by Type of Employment (SLCTE) from 2008 to 2017. We construct worker groups by sex, age, and education to mitigate endogeneity problem in estimating the effect of minimum wage increment. The result shows that the minimum wage increment leads to decrease of new employment and increase of the ratio of new workers who work less than 15 hours per week. Especially, women, the elderly, the youth, and under high school education level group are sensitive to the minimum wage increment.

  • PDF