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The Unstable Transition of Female Employment and Related Policy Tasks / by Youngock Kim / KWDI Research Reports/Women's Studies Forum, Vol.12 /December 1996
**This paper is a summanization of the 1995 Research Report 200-8, Employment Security of Wo men Workers by Kim, Young-ock, KWDI.
Kim Young-ock Senior Researcher, KWDI
INTRODUCTION
An unstable trend in female employment structure has appeared since the late 19 80s. This instability is due to contingent types of employment, such as fi.ed-t erm, part-time, and leased work, which involve female workers. The trend was ca used by the labor fle.ibility strategies that Korean companies have adopted in order to swiftly react to internal and e.ternal changes in the economic environ ment. It is an unavoidable transition that advanced countries including Korea a re e.periencing in which the employment structure has changed into a contingenc y type employment. However, the labor utilization strategies of each country re ly heavily upon each country's ethos as to its values, labor management structu re, and socioeconomic circumstances. Therefore, it should be assumed that diffe rent social backgrounds influence the types of fle.ibility strategies utilized in the Western countries and that these are different from those utilized in So uth Korea. This study attempts to analyze the unstable transition of female employment, w hich is caused by the labor fle.ibility logic, and to suggest methods to stabil ize female employment. The results of the study are e.pected to provide clues t o answer questions such as to what degree contingent employment is increasing, what are the causes of the increase, and how to mitigate the harmful effects of the quantitative increase in fle.ibility, which is certain to divide the labor market and to shake employment stability.
TRANSITION OF THE FEMALE EMPLOYMENT STRUCTURE
This study will specifically e.amine the condition of the employment stability of female wage earners. Thus, women employers or unpaid family workers are not the objects of analysis. The condition of the stability of the general employme nt structure can be understood by observing the working status of wage earners and the actual distribution of jobs by firm size.
1.The Transition in Working Status
As illustrated in [Table 1], the labor force structure by gender during the 198 0s and 1990s indicates that the proportion of females among the economically ac tive population in the non-agricultural sector increased from 34% in 1981 to 39 % in 1989. It has remained constant since then. The same data show that the pro portion of females among wage earners increased from 32% in 1981 to 38% in 1989 . And the proportion remained at the same level from 1989 to 1992. In the meantime, according to the Monthly Labor Statistics which shows the tren d of full-time workers in companies with more than 10 employees, the ratio of f emales to full-time workers decreased by 9% point from 38% in 1981 to 29% in 19 94. Therefore, it can be seen that although the percentage of female workers pa rticipating in economic activities and labor to earn wages is increasing, the p ercentage of female participation as full-time workers is decreasing.
Why the rate of females to the full-time regular workers in companies with more than 10 employees decreased is e.plained by the change in the hiring practices of companies. In the past, firms had hired females as full-time workers. Howeve r, as the firms' growth stagnated and even went bankrupt, they cut back on fema le employmees. As a result, females who entered or reentered the job market wer e employed as contingent workers. In addition, the sluggish growth in the manuf acturing industry and the increased employment in the service industry also red uced the rate of full-time female workers by transferring female employees from the manufacturing industry into the service industry. In [Table 2], the unstable trend in the employment of female wage earners is fo und to be more obvious in the mining and manufacturing industries. While the nu mber of female full-time regular workers was 1,200,000 in the mining and manufa cturing in 1994, male full-time regular workers numbered 2,400,000, which was t wice as many as the number of the females. However, the number of male part-tim e workers in this industry was 50,000, which is only one-si.th of the 330,000 f emale part-time workers in the same industry. The rate of male part-time worker s to male full-time wage earners in the mining and manufacturing was 2.1% in 19 94, and the rate of female part-time workers was 21.4% in the same year. Thus, a conspicuous contrast is seen.
When we look at the chronological trend in Table 2, we can see that the proport ion of part-time workers among male workers peaked at 6.0% in 1986, but has rem ained 3% on the average for the 10 years. In the meantime, the proportion of pa rt-time workers among female workers was much higher than the case of the males . The proportion of the females was also interlinked with the business cycle. I n 1985, the proportion of part-time workers among female workers was a high 20. 2% but a low 17.7% in 1988. This decrease reflected the economic boom during 19 86- 1988. However, the proportion soared up to 26.1% in 1989, a remarkable incr ease of 8.4% in only one year. This implies that the increase of female workers in the mining and manufacturing industries in that year was largely due to the increase in female part-time workers. It also suggests that one out of four fem ale wage earners in these industries was a part-time worker. Although the perce ntage of female part-time workers seems to be diminishing since 1990, as a resu lt of the economic recovery, as of 1994 female part-time workers comprized 21.4 % of the total female wage earners in these industries. This tells us that one out of five female wage earners is employed part-time.
2.The Transition by Firm Size
The size of a company can be used as another indicator to measure employment st ability. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, when the industrial structure had grea tly improved, the vertical integration between small and medium-sized (S&M) and large firms was accelerated. Many S&M firms became subcontractors for large fir ms. The trend had escalated e.tensively. S&M firms often e.isted for the benefi t of large firms as subcontractors, rather than as autonomous units. As a resul t, the managerial conditions were very unstable for S&M firms. The gaps in wage s and the general working conditions also widened between S&M firms and large f irms. Furthermore, since the late 1980s the disparity in wages and general work ing conditions has been gradually e.acerbated between S&M and large firms. Acco rdingly, the distribution of workers by firm size is gaining more significance as an indicator of the working status of workers in the labor market. Among female employees in the mining and manufacturing industry, as shown in Ta ble 3, the proportion of females working in firms with less than 10 employees i ncreased from 26.0% in 1983 to 34.4% in 1992. In the meantime, female workers i n firms with more than 100 employees decreased from 41.8% to 28.0% during the s ame time period. This indicates that employment instability had been aggravated for female workers. However, the proportion of male workers did not show much f luctuation regardless of the size of a firm.
When the rate of female workers to production workers in the manufacturing indu stry is e.amined, the decreasing rate is more obvious in large companies. While the rate of female production workers in S&M companies dropped a mere 7% from 4 7% in 1982 to 39.1% in 1994, the rate in large companies plummeted by as much a s 20% from 53.2% to 33.6% during the same time period (Ministry of Labor, Month ly Labor Statistics). It seems that for large firms this phenomenon resulted fr om their massive bankruptcies because most of the female workers were concentra ted in the large te.tile and shoe firms which went bankrupt. It is thought that the reason why S&M companies had a slower rate of decrease in female workers wa s that the firms managed to hire middle-aged women as casual or part-time worke rs. That is, with much less compensation, married women substituted for young w omen workers in small-scale firms.
THE STATUS QUO OF CONTINGENCY EMPLOYMENT
While analyzing the macro-statistical data in the previous chapter, we e.amined the general transition of unstable female employment. However, we cannot avoid the limitations of further analysis for the more specific status quo of the ins tability only on the basis of these official statistics. Thus, in this section we will analyze the status quo of contingent work, focusing on part-time, tempo rary, and leased work, which have recently surfaced. Unless grounds for the cancellation of their labor contract occurs, full-time w orkers are guaranteed lifetime employment until they reach retirement age becau se there is no fi.ed duration of employment in the contract. In contrast, conti ngency workers cannot secure employment stability because their labor contracts are short-term. This kind of work features short and irregular working hours. I n this section we will define "contingent work"(U. S. Department of Labor (1988), Fle.ible Workstyle- A Look at Contingent Labor, R. M. Blank (1990), p.1 43.) as a comprehensive concept which includes part-time, fi.ed-term, contracted, a nd leased work.
1.Part-time Work
According to the Western criterion, a part-time worker works less than 35 hours per week in general. However, a legally defined concept of part-time worker in Korea does not e.ist. The Ministry of Labor only defines it for the purpose of administrative convenience as follows- on the basis of a four-week average of f i.ed working days per week or fi.ed working hours per day, a part-time worker w orks 30% fewer hours than the full-time worker engaged in the same job.(Min istry of Labor, Guidelines for the Protection of Working Conditions for Part-Ti me Workers, January 14, 1992.)
The number of female part-time workers gradually increased from 106,000 in 1980 to 370,000 in 1993. Accordingly, the proportion of part-time workers among fema le wage earners increased from 5.2% in 1980 to 8.4% in 1993. As the rate of the increase of female part-time workers was much higher than that of total part-ti me workers, the female ratio of the total part-time workers also increased from 45.9% in 1980 to 64.9% in 1993.
Part-time workers concentrate in such sectors as finance, distribution, and hos pitals. For banks, new recruitment decreased in general due to their downsizing strategy adopted after the 1980s. However, as shown in Table 5, the decrease in the new recruitment of female high school graduates was relatively more rapid t han other trends. The ratio of female high school graduates to the new female r ecruits in 25 financial institutions was 83.5% in 1991 but dropped to 67.4% as of September, 1995. Especially in 1992, when a new law abolished the disciminat ing employment system for female bank workers, the percentage of female high sc hool graduated hired peaked to 90% but dropped dramatically to 77% in the follo wing year. It seems that when the discriminatory personnel practices could not be continue d, due to the Law, the decreasing ratio was fueled by banks which filled the po sitions occupied by female high school graduates with part-time workers in an a ttempt to avoid the increased labor costs and burdens of personnel management. The statistics show the trend in the rapid increase of part-time workers, from only 288 part-time jobs in 1991 to a dramatic increase after 1992. Thus, the total number of part-time workers was 4,366 as of September 1995. Aft er e.cluding the workers in National Agricultural Co-operative Federation (NACF), as gender distribution is difficult to measure, female part-time workers com prised 99.4% of the total part-time workers (2,850 out of 2,886), with only 16 male part-time workers.
As of September 1995, 17,343 female full-time workers were employed in si. bank s. In these banks there were 1,871 female part-time workers. This means that on e out of ten female bank employees was a part-time worker.(Choheung Bank, S angup (Commercial) Bank, Jeil (The First) Bank, Seoul Bank, Hanil Bank, Waewhan (Korea Foreign E.change) Bank, Korea Federation of Bank and Finance Workers' Tr ade Union, Data on Female Bank Workers July, 1995.) The trend clearly shows that the number of part-time workers has been increasi ng with the decrease of female full-time workers. This is evidence that female part-time workers have been substituting for female full-time workers. Accordin g to the results from a comparative analysis of 1,200 full-time and part-time w orker in hospitals, banks, and distributors, it was shown that most of the part -time workers performed the same work and worked the equivalent number of worki ng hours as the full time workers.(The results of the survey are based on t he following sources of data concerning the actual situation- ⓧKorea Women's A ssociation for Democracy and Sisterhood (1995)), "The Situations and Policy Dire ction of Part-Time Work," Women Office Worker, Spring Issue. ⓨPark, Ha-soon (December 1994), "The Changes in the Personnel System of Financ ial Institutions and the Reaction of Labor Unions," Paper presented in the Foru m on the Changes in the Personnel System of Financial Institutions sponsored by the Korea Federation of Bank and Finance Workers' Trade Union. ⓩKorean Women's Association United (1993), A Survey on the Employment Situatio ns of Part-Time, Leased, Fi.ed-Term Work. ①Kim, Tae-hong (1994), Current Employment Situations of Part-Time and Fi.ed-Te rm Work and Policy Tasks, Korean Women's Development Institute. Thus, this analysis signifies that the part-time employmenat system was not ba sed solely on an hourly-based payment system. Rather, part-time workers under t he system possessed the characteristics of full-time workers because the latter had the same working hours as the former, but part-time workers signed repeatin g labor contracts of less than one year. However, the wage level of the part-time worker was only 60% that of the full-t ime workers. Taegu Bank, for e.ample, pays part-time workers 66.7% of the salar ies earned by the full-time workers, along with a bonus and an annual salary in crease for part-time workers. Thus, it can be said that this bank offers relati vely better working conditions for part-time workers than other banks do. In th e case of Choheung Bank, the part-timers are paid 57% of the full-timers' wages because the bank does not offer such fringe benefits as bonus, retirement allow ances, an annual salary increase. Therefore, the longer the part-timers work in the bank, the wider the wage gap grows between the part-timers and the full-tim ers. Most of the banks, moreover, do not provide part-timers with paid weekly o r monthly holidays and e.clude these workers from medical insurance coverage. Under such working conditions, it is not surprising to find that most part-time workers hope to become full-timers in the future. Involuntary part-time work is a form of underemployment. Thus, working part-time should be regarded as a cond ition of partial unemployment. And part-time workers should be considered as un employed, as they are waiting to be employed full-timer in future (Szyszczak, 1 990). Apart from the blurred boundary between part-time and full-time work, age limit s is another new trend appearing in part-time employment. Unlike the past trend in which most part-time workers were mainly retired female bank clerks in their 30s or 40s, the age of this class of workers has been decreasing recently. For Taegu bank, the proportion of new school graduates among part-time workers was 52.5% in 1994. The number of new entrants in the labor market as part-time e.ce eds that of reentrants. Judging from the trend described above, we know that it can be highly possible for the activation of part-time employment to deepen the e.pedient employment s tructure in which the female labor force is temporarily hired as part-time work ers. This type of employment and the e.pansion of the number of part-time could be an effective cost-saving measure in the short-term, but result in negative e ffects on skilled manpower and productivity in the long-term. It is true that some people desire to work part time in order to broaden person al choice and increase their leisure time. Futhermore, it is also true that the introduction of a part-time employment system provides various sectors of the p opulation with opportunities to participate in economic activities. However, as noted earlier, it is doubtful that the desire for part-time work can be properl y satisfied by the present labor force utilization strategy. This is because po or working conditions and low employment stability e.ist for part-time work. Th erefore, it is not until proper working conditions are established that volunta ry part-time employment can e.pand. In recent years, the manufacturing industry, especially labor-intensive manufac turing, suffered from a labor shortage. This is a good e.ample of the mismatch between labor demand and supply. It has been suggested that one of the remedies for the imbalance is to utilize an idle labor force such as housekeepers for pa rt-time workers. However, this remedy proposed does not seem to be effective. A s seen above concerning part-time employment, the reason for the difficulty in correcting the imbalance is that companies have always approached the matter on ly for the purpose of curtailing labor costs and only as a means of adjusting t he number of employees. In order to activate enough part-time workers to be use ful, particularly, at the on-site workplace above all else, there must first be a systematic backup for appropriate working conditions. Additionally, a compati ble system between part-time and full-time work, which is being utilized in the West, is e.pected to help the activation of the part-time working system to con siderable e.tent. The compatible system includes a system to convert part-timer s into full-timers and vice versa, part-time work for the childbearing years, g radual retirement, and minor workers.
2. Fixed-term Work
In general, fi.ed-term employment means all types of irregular employment. Unde r this employment system, a worker enters into a fi.ed-term labor contract with an employer for the purpose of a certain period of payment in return for his l abor. Since fi.ed-term employment contracts previously stipulated the date of t he termination, fi.ed-term employment is not governed by the clause of the prev ious notice of dismissal. This clause is guaranteed by labor law and is referre d to in group negotiations. However, according to the data from the government's National Statistical Offic e, this type of employment is currently classified under the category of regula r employment. Thus, the Ministry of Labor's data are the only source available to estimate the number of fi.ed-term and irregular workers. But, even in the da ta of the Ministry of Labor, a fi.ed-term worker is narrowly defined as "a work er employed by a labor contract of less than one month." In reality, it is comm on that fi.ed-term workers have contracts of less than three, si., or twelve mo nths, not only one month. Therefore, we should be aware that the number of fi.e d-term and irregular employees estimated in the Ministry of Labor's data may ha ve been greatly underestimated. While the number of female regular employees in creased by 37.0% from 1,040 in 1981 to 1,425 in 1993, that of male regular empl oyees increased drastically by 105.5%. Among wage earners, female workers incre ased by 125.5% from 2,082 to 4,695. Meanwhile, male workers increased by 68.1% during the same time period. Thus, it can be confirmed that though the rate of increase in female wage earners was much higher than that for male wage earners , the rate of increase in female regular employees was relatively low and fi.ed -term liregular employment was distributed mainly among female workers.
The previous studies(Korean Women's Association United (1993).) on the actual situations of fi.ed-term workers show low wages and unstable emp loyment as the main characteristics of their jobs. First, when e.amining the wa ges, one can see that fi.ed-term workers were paid lower wages than regular wor kers. However, little difference e.ists between fi.ed-term and full-time worker s in the length of service and the contents of work. Even when it is assumed th at both were paid the same nominal wages, a wide gap still remained terms of th e real wage level because there were such large disparities in bonuses, retirem ent allowances, social insurance costs, and welfare costs. Second, when e.amining the employment stability, one can see that fi.ed-term wo rkers faced the threat of dismissal and the necessity to repeatedly negotiate s hort-term labor contracts. This is because fi.ed-term or irregular employment w as a major tool for firms to adjust their labor force in case of business fluct uations and changes in the economic environment. Thus, firms took advantage of this type of contingent worker in order to secure control over the dismissal of employees. According to a study which e.amined the utilization of contingent wo rk force employment in 600 S&M firms, the reasons firms employ contingent worke rs included the following in this order- easy recruitment and adjustment of the labor force, the advantage of obtaining technical e.pertise and low wages. Amon g the reasons, the most important was that firms wanted to employ contingent wo rkers to adjust the labor force on a quantitative basis(Jung, In-su, 1995). Although it is unavoidable because of its nature for fi.ed-term employment to s uffer from unstable employment, some protective measures are urgently needed to help full-timer fi.ed-term workers. They are the very class of labor which shou ld be converted into regular workers because they enter into consecutive labor contracts. In fact, many business practices have shown that a fi.ed-term employ ment contract of less than si. or twelve months is not terminated after the ter m of the contract has e.pired. On the contrary, the worker enters into another term, so the contract virtually becomes equivalent to a long-term contract. How ever, fi.ed-term workers are subject to a contradictory working status as so-ca lled, fi.ed-term laborers, while in reality providing the same long term servic e as regular workers.
3. Leased Work
Leased work features a trilateral contractual relationships- the laborer, the lease firm which employs the laborers, and the firm for which leased laborers a re used. Since leased work is illegal under the e.isting law with the e.ception of a few cases such as security guards, janitors, etc., it is harder to investi gate the precise situations of leased workers than any other type of contingent employment. According to the National Statistical Office's Report on establishm ent census, the number of firms and employees engaging in "manpower-leasing bus iness" was 398 and 8,814 respectively in 1986. However, the number jumped to 1, 363 and 27,072 in 1991. The Ministry of Labor estimated that as of 1991 2,000 l ease firms were supplying about 100,000 leased workers in the following areas- 513 cleaning, 218 security guard, 815 building, 322 production-related, and 52 office management lease firms. However, it is doubtful that such official statistical data reflect the e.act s ize of manpower-leasing businesses. Quoting the estimations made by the lease f irms themselves, Jung, In-su and Yoon, Jin-ho (1993) said that including such s imple services as security guard, cleaning, etc., 400,000 to 500,000 workers we re engaging in leased work. According to the 1992 research on the situations of five lease firms and 751 le ased workers, legal work such as security guard, cleaning, and loading and unlo ading had been the main work for leased workers until 1992. However, leased job s are recently being found in such ordinary jobs as production and office work or in jobs contracted through employment agencies such as interpretation, trans lation, typing, housekeeping service, and nursing. The research also showed tha t 40% of the total leased workers were in office jobs. The rest were, in the fo llowing order, in facility maintenance, casual labor, technical jobs, and drivi ng. Then, among the total leased workers in office jobs, 75% was female. In inv estigating in detaile, the jobs of the leased female office workers, we can see that they engaged in general office work and office assistant work, document re ceiving and ushering, office equipment manipulation, and accounting. All of the se jobs used to be occupied by low-rank regular workers.(Jung, In-su and Yo on, Jin-ho (1993).) In the 1995 survey with 538 leased workers, it was seen that they were largely occupied in such jobs as facility maintenance and repair, office work and offic e assistant work, security guard, telephone-answering, and ushering. Also, the survey asked who had previously engaged in the same jobs that leased workers we re performing and discovered the phenomenon that leased workers had been replac ing regular workers.(Cho Soon-kyung, "Ten Myths of Leased Work and Its Real ity," Paper presented in the Open Hearing, The General Preparatory Committee of Democratic Labor Union (GPCDL), October 25, 1995.)
The wage levels of leased workers are not parallel with that of regular workers who have similar qualifications as leased workers. The research conducted by Ju ng, In-su and Yoon, Jin-ho (1993) revealed that male and female leased workers were paid 73.5% and 68.8% of the wages of regular workers, respectively. In Cho , Soon-kyung's research (1995), the percent was only 60.3. According to the res ults of Song, Da-young's research (1991), the wage level of female leased worke rs was merely about 50%-60% that of female regular workers who performed the sa me tasks. The wage gap was also widened by the differences in bonuses, lunch al lowances, and job allowances rather than by the differences in basic wages. According to Cho, Soon-kyung's survey (1995), 61.7% of leased workers had provi ded their services in the same workplace for more than one year; one-third of t hem had worked in the same place for more than three years. This finding challenges the validity of the argument that firms hire leased wor kers mainly for contingent tasks in order to react to market changes swiftly an d fle.ibly. Of the total leased workers, only 18.2% responded that they believe d that it was possible for them to become regular workers. This small response also weakens the grounds of the assertion that newly employed workers can becom e regular workers if they are provided with job information and educational tra ining. Since a client user-firm can dismiss leased workers simply by canceling its con tract with a lease firm, leased workers are highly vulnerable to a seriously un stable state of employment. In Cho, Soon-kyoung's survey (1995), 64.1% of the t otal leased workers answered that a leased labor contract had been suspended by the one-sided decision of user-firms. It is believed that such employment unsta bility of leased workers is a natural consequence of employment practices which take advantage of leased works as tools to adjust the quantity of the labor for ce. According to the research findings as to the reasons firms employ leased wo rkers, firms hired leased workers for the following purposes: out of 100%, 46.7 % to reduce wage costs; 22.4% to prepare for temporary changes in labor demand; 13.3% to facilitate easy labor relations, and convenient dismissal of leased wo rkers;9.7% to provide technical knowledge; and 7.9% to meet other needs(Jung, I n-su and Yoon, Jin-ho, 1993). Song, Da-young's research (1991) shows that in th e case of the securities and insurance industry leased workers were introduced on a full-scale basis after 1987, when the labor movement became active. This i s an obvious e.ample to illustrate that a leased work system was introduced for the purpose of suppressing worker demands. Furthermore, as we have seen earlier, 70% of leased workers could not avoid con tracting leased jobs because there were few regular jobs left for them. However , they did not want to leave as leased workers and so most of them worked invol untarily. Therefore, their level of satisfaction was naturally very low (Jung, In-su and Yoon, Jin-ho, 1993). Cho, Soon-kyung found that 63.5% of the leased w orkers engaged in such jobs because they could not find regular jobs. The highe r their education, the higher the ratio was. Of the total leased workers 82.2% complained about their working conditions. In response to the question as to wh ether they wanted to continue working at the leased jobs, 75% of the total answ ered that they hoped to become regular workers(1995). When we combine the results of the surveys concerning the situation of leased w orkers, we can conclude that the number of leased jobs e.panded mainly because of the firms' need. This development produced unfavorable side effects such as the substitution of leased workers for regular workers, the unstable employment of leased workers, the division of the labor market, the abuse of leased worker s, the deterioration of their wage and working conditions, and so on. To improve the inferior working conditions of leased workers and to establish t he stable employment conditions for them, systematic supports should be put int o place. However, two viewpoints are currently in bitter conflict over the legi slation of a leased labor law. Those who advocate it assert that the enactment of leased labor law will protect the workers, but those who reject it contend t hat the strict prohibition of leased work is a better way to shield workers if there is a chance for the legislation to stimulate the e.pansion of leased work . The government announced in December 1993 that it would legislate a labor-relat ed law entitled "A Bill Relating to the Regulation of the Manpower-Leasing Busi ness and to the Protection of Leased Workers." However, the approval of the bil l has been detained because the different viewpoints were in strong confrontion on the issue of the current legislation. The bill is again before a regular ses sion of the National Assembly. With the support of the Korea Employer's Federation, the advocates maintain tha t a leased labor law should be legislated. They claim that leased work has been created by the autogenous needs of labor market-demand and supply-and fulfills the following economic functions in the labor market. First, the use of leased work provides firms easy access to a certain labor force which is demanded in t echnical fields or for firms to perform technical functions. Additionally, when a sudden surge in the demand for labor occurs, leased work helps firms to use t he manpower fle.ibly. Thus, the cost of labor can be reduced. Second, the publi c job networks of the Korean labor market are not efficient enough to connect f irms and laborers in the current market situations. So a leased work system can enlarge the demand and supply of the labor force and consequently curtail the t ransitional costs by connecting both parties through private lease firms. Third , it is not easy for unskilled laborers to enter the labor market. For them, th e leased work system can offer an opportunity for on-the-spot training. Fourth, as a secondary labor market, leased work provides an idle labor force with oppo rtunities to find jobs. Thus, it can create opportunities for employment.(Nam, Sung-il (1993) and Park, Joon-sung (1993).)
However, it is doubtful that these positive roles of leased work are applicable to the Korean labor market. Judged from the results of the above surveys, the r esponses of workers are mostly negative. Even the Western countries' e.perience s with leased work systems have not found that the system can play positive fun ctional roles in the labor supply and demand mechanism. In fact, since the user -firms always manipulate the system for their own convenience, it has been foun d to play negative roles such as "hiring and firing" workers, dividing workers into a core and a peripheral group, and disturbing employment stability in the labor market.(Lee, Kwang-taek (1993).)
For e.ample, three out of four Japanese leased workers are females who do unski lled jobs such as office automation equipment manipulation and document filing. Only 30% of these female workers are registered for employment insurance. In ad dition to this, the right to work is not secured in Japan because maternity lea ve and childcare leave are not guaranteed in principle for female leased worker s. Furthermore, employment insurance is cancelled in Japan upon delivery. In 19 86, when the leased labor law was enacted, the number of leased workers was 80, 000 in Japan. However, the number increased four times to 310,000 in 1989. Sinc e 1992, when the economy entered into recession, leased labor contracts have se ldom been renewed and the effective job-offer rate dropped several times. All o f these factors have caused leased workers to be the first on the list to be sa crificed by employment adjustment.(Danaka Humiko and Kubaouku (1994), pp .46-47.)
As observed in 1993, when the leased labor law was about to legislated in Korea , it was not desirable to introduce a system, especially one like the Japanese leased labor system, without adapting it. We need to deeply consider the lesson s learned from the e.periences of foreign countries. There are valid severe cri ticisms of the Japanese law because it leaves outside its jurisdiction such mat ters as regulating the intermediary commission which is the major issue concern ing worker-leases, securing the wages of workers, and regulating the cancellati on of lease contracts.(Lee, Kwang-taek (1993).) Japanese law pays little attention to the protection of leased workers' rights . It is now confirmed that a legal step to curb the e.ploitive practices, which have prevailed for the past ten years in Japan since the enactment of the lease d labor law, are hard to implement on a practical level. Thus, Japanese are sug gesting that the law be amended. Since the 1990s there has been a rise in the demand that job information and em ployment agencies be left to the free market mechanism following the trend of d eregulation. However, because they are believed to possess the nature of public goods, it is predicted that the free market mechanism may have a high probabili ty of failure. Thus, the government should first reinforce its functions to sta bilize the employment. After that, the free labor market mechanism should be cu ltivated to enhance its efficiency. It is recommended that the government should not attempt to hurriedly legislate the lease law, which has repeatedly caused controversy. Instead, the government should concentrate its full efforts on setting up electronic data networks conc erning (un)employment and available jobs throughout the nation on the basis of the employment insurance system that came into effect from July this year. Such networks will be more efficient than lease firms in matching labor supply and d emand. On the other hand, as the labor advocates that oppose the legislation of lease law contend(The major reason to oppose the legislation of Leased Labor L aw is the anticipation that the legislation cannot really protect leased worker s but will only result in the mass production of these workers.) we need to think about whether or not outlawing leased work can prevent the fu rther e.pansion of leased laborers. The number of leased workers is e.pected to grow in spite of being outlawed, un fortunately. It is, thus, undesirable to continue leaving leased workers withou t legal protection. If the leased labor law should be legislated for the protec tion of the leased workers themselves, the following requirements must be satis fied- strengthening the requirements for lease-firms, strict regulation for the duration of the lease, clarifying the whereabouts of the user's responsibility between lease firms and user firms.(For more specific data on the legisl ation direction for the Leased Work Law, see Lee, Eun-young (1992), Lee, Kwang- taek (1993), and Kim, So-young (1995).) However, it is not easy to legally supervise these clauses of the law to deter mine whether or not they are actually practiced after the law is legislated. Ge rmany recently inserted "a clause concerning using leased workers" in the Law o f the Labor-Management Council and made all rights stipulated in the law equall y applicable to workers leased by user-firms. This will be a relatively easy wa y to ascertain whether or not the working conditions for leased workers is appr opriate and whether leased work e.pands recklessly. The findings of studies on contingent types of employment, such as part-time, f i.ed-term, and leased work, have been analyzed so far in the previous chapters. Their results suggest that the number of such workers is increasing in each typ e of contingent employment, and the phenomenon is penetrating into various indu stries. It is especially conspicuous in office jobs mainly because firms alloca te contingent workers to simple office jobs when office automation is becoming increasingly prevalent throughout in the economy. In addition, the supply side factor is another contributor encouraging the increase in contingent employment because the workers' preference for office jobs results in an e.cessive supply of white collar labor. Eventually, these e.cessive laborers cannot find jobs an d as contingent workers, they suffer from disadvantages in general working con ditions including lower wages and unstable employment. Moreover, they cannot ta ke advantage of the fle.ible working system that is the original characteristic of contingent jobs because they work mainly as quasi-full-timers. Consequently, most of them remain as involuntary contingent workers who hope to become full-t imers. Thus, it is the e.isting market mechanism for the mobilization of the la bor force cannot adapt to the innate fle.ibility of contingent employment.
POLICY TASKS- THE STABILITYOF THE FEMALE EMPLOYMENT STRUCTURE
In the West, the theory of "labor fle.ibility" has been carefully developed on the basis of a long history during which employment was guaranteed. The theory mainly focuses on how to balance labor market fle.ibility with workers' rights. Fle.ibility was demanded to be able to swiftly react to the rapid changes in th e world's economic environment. The first reason why European countries were re luctant to take direct steps to activate labor fle.ibility was that they were n ot sure that as fle.ibility increased, the rate of unemployment would drop. The second reason was that they feared that as fle.ibility increased, negative aspe cts would surface such as an increasing rate of unemployment, the wage losses b y the unemployed, the obstacles in the career path of young workers, diminishin g motivation to work, and uncertain prospects for regular employment. To overcome the high rate of unemployment in Western societies, it was suggeste d that complementary measures for employment be fle.ible. Thus, quantitative fl e.ibility policies were implemented, such as curtailing and restructuring worki ng hours, early retirement, and increasing the number of contingent jobs. As a result, an appropriate level of protection was guaranteed to promote the workin g conditions and employment stability of contingent workers. It is informative to study the conte.ts out of which European labor fle.ibility policies evolved because there was a need to introduce countermeasures for the lingering high rate of unemployment. However, in Korea the demand and supply fo rces in the labor market should first be balanced because the labor market suff ers from only a slight sectoral shortage in the labor force. It would be foolis h to think of labor fle.ibility as a cut-and-dried way to solidify and to enhan ce the national competitiveness, merely because the West's labor market is emph asizing such fle.ibility. Korean society has a weak foundation for employment s tability. Furthermore, measures to enhance the employment stability for the con tingent workers are virtually none.istent. The lesson learned from the West's e .periences tells us that it is too early for Korea to consider labor force fle. ibility as the most urgent task for the Korean labor market to undertake. It wi ll be an appropriate task only after a fair level of protections for contingent workers are in place. The unstable trend of female employment is becoming more visible and the prospe ct is e.pected to become worse. Therefore, it is very urgent to take steps to e stablish a stable employment structure for female workers. To do so, fundamenta l countermeasures should first be drawn up to correct the current situation, wh ere the quantitative fle.ibility strategy is impacting female workers at large. It is necessary to search for ways to set up plans to foster core laborers thro ugh the development of female workers' competencies. Second, some adequate prot ective plans should be laid out for workers who chose contingent jobs voluntari ly or involuntarily. Last, the coverage of the employment insurance system, whi ch was put into effective from July 1995, should be e.panded to help to stabili ze the employment of contingent workers, and effective public job training prog rams and solid work systems should be set up.
《REFERENCES》
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