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[Lee Jae-min] Calm thinking on quiet quitting
[Lee Jae-min] Calm thinking on quiet quitting

Korea Herald

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Korea Herald

[Lee Jae-min] Calm thinking on quiet quitting

Korea still works hard. The country is known for its long working hours. A recent OECD survey in April 2025 puts Korea at No. 5 out of 38 countries surveyed with 1,900 hours per year per person. On top of that, Korea has long championed a strong work ethic with which people are educated and told to "do their best" on the job. The "do-your-best" mentality arguably underpins the economic success story of the resource-scarce country. Korean workplaces are now seeing seismic changes in this "hard work" culture. It would be another 'back-in-my-days' story that becomes easy gossip material for young colleagues over their lunch that day. Obviously, the young generation thinks differently. As people half-jokingly say, three questions when Millennials and Generation Z staff are asked to do something to which they do not fully subscribe are: 'You mean this?,' 'You mean me?' and 'Why should I?' in sequence. So, they need a particular reason to do the work. The changing workplace culture in the country slowly spreads the term "quiet quitting." It is a phrase coined a couple of years ago in other countries to describe a situation where people do not resign, but do the minimum on the job. It means employees stay on the job passively even if they do not quit outright. According to a survey conducted by local job portal Incruit in March 2024, 51.7 percent of respondents, many of whom were from younger generations, said they were in the mode of quiet quitting. Presumably, other countries are seeing a similar trend as well. According to Gallup's State of the Global Workplace 2025, 79 percent of employees globally are either not engaged (62 percent) or actively disengaged (17 percent) from their work or organization, both situations that might fan quiet quitting. In East Asia, the rate stands at 82 percent (65 percent plus 17 percent). In Korea, debates are ongoing; there is a growing tension between those who expect more contribution on the job versus those who are ready to do just what is required of them. Emails and posts abound with leadership enhancement materials and coaching skills to kill the quiet quitting trend and galvanize the communal spirit at the workplace. Come to think of it, perhaps the concept of quiet quitting has persisted through human history. Bad bosses are steadily plentiful. Toxic human relationships and unreasonable decisions are rampant in the workplace. No wonder learned helplessness seeps in with frustrated people poised to do the bare minimum. Even under a good boss and in a friendly work environment, many of us frequently struggle between doing our best and doing the minimum, striving to ride out the day and the month to stay afloat at work. People don't just go full speed constantly. So, quiet quitting may not be a new phenomenon, but another label for an old social interaction that remains within socially acceptable parameters. The difference seems to be that people are now more open about it, and sometimes make it public. Quiet quitting, however, apparently has its limit. When it degenerates into avoidance of required work and failure to complete the mandate, that seems to be a different story. Quiet quitting in that case does not do the bare minimum; instead, it holds the entity back. It is like someone throwing in a pinch of sand into a machine every now and then. Many a day will go unnoticed and uneventful, but there will come the moment when a single grain of sand brings the machine to a halt. There may be cases for both, and each case is different indeed. Sometimes, it can be hard to tell which is which. A critical point of note for the Korean workplace from the quiet quitting dialogue is the need for a transition from a nuanced culture of unwritten rules to clear job descriptions. Nuanced communication, unwritten norms and implicit codes of behavior once conducted Korean workplaces like a well-orchestrated symphony. That culture has undergone significant changes, but still lingers on here and there — sometimes yes and no are not entirely clear, and nudges and prods from company superiors are hard to decipher. Short on specifics and ambiguous, the nuance culture does not really present a reliable guideline in today's offices and cubicles. Doing the best and putting company matters first are the representative snapshots of the traditional work culture. The younger generations would not buy such subtle nuances. Nor would they like to be jerked around by bosses and seniors. They would expect to see clear rules and distinct boundaries. So, in the Korean context, the quiet quitting discourse may offer an occasion for healthy debates on drawing a boundary between work and personal life. Work-life balance and work-rest balance are ever more important for individuals, companies and organizations in Korea. The discourse may also usher in an environment of clearer and more detailed job descriptions. As long as an employee completes the task promised, that should be sufficient — it would be too much to expect something more than that. If doing the best is required, or doing whatever is necessary is necessary, a different compensation package or incentive arrangement may be needed. In sum, motivation triggers for younger generations in today's workplaces in Seoul: clear job description, fair evaluation and proper compensation, together with after-work freedom to mind their own business. Long working hours and abrasive "give-me-your-best" pressure will drive them further into the cave of quiet quitting.

Korean job seekers want W41.4m starting salary: survey
Korean job seekers want W41.4m starting salary: survey

Korea Herald

time29-04-2025

  • Business
  • Korea Herald

Korean job seekers want W41.4m starting salary: survey

Job seekers in South Korea want to be paid 41.4 million won ($28,775) in their first year of employment, a survey showed Tuesday. A local job search platform Incruit researched 691 people about to graduate from college in August of this year to find their ideal and minimum first-year salary. The asking salary for this year marked a slight increase from 41.36 million won in the same survey last year. Those wanting to work at large corporations sought 43.58 million won, those targeting middle-market enterprises wanted 38.06 million won, while respondents seeking to work at small and medium-sized enterprises said they wanted 30.93 million won for their starting salaries. When asked how they set their salary expectations, 34.9 percent said they considered the size of the companies they wish to join and the overall starting salaries of the industry they wish to work in. Some 94.8 percent of the respondents said they consider the companies' wages when applying for a job. The biggest factor when choosing a company was the financial compensation for work (40.1 percent), followed by possibility for employee's professional growth (14.5 percent) and the welfare benefits provided by the company (8.7 percent). Minimum asking salary dips, possibly due to slumping job market As for the minimum starting salary they would accept to join a company, surveyed job seekers cited 36.37 million won, down from 37 million won in last year's survey. Incruit said the job seekers willing to work for less was due to the prolonged economic slump and the subsequent freezing of the job market. According to Statistics Korea last month, employment among Koreans aged 25-29 fell by 98,000 in the first quarter of 2025 compared to the year before, the largest on-year drop since the third quarter of 2013. The drop in employment was much steeper than the overall population decrease of that age group, which fell by 69,000 over the same period.

Marriage is optional, over 60 percent of South Korean workers say
Marriage is optional, over 60 percent of South Korean workers say

Korea Herald

time10-03-2025

  • Business
  • Korea Herald

Marriage is optional, over 60 percent of South Korean workers say

More than half of South Korean workers said in a recent survey that getting married is not crucial in life, according to a job-search platform on Monday. Local job portal Incruit surveyed 653 workers across the country on what their views were on marriage, and 60.2 percent said marrying was not something one necessarily has to do. The survey revealed a substantial difference between how women and men view the need to marry, as 75.3 percent of the female respondents felt tying the knot is a matter of choice, compared to 49.7 percent of male respondents who did. While the majority of respondents said marrying is a choice, 66.6 percent of respondents said they did want to get married. Some 57.5 percent said they wanted to get married for "emotional stability," followed by 17.6 percent who said they wanted to marry to have a child. About 39.7 percent of those who did not want to get married said they "do not feel the necessity" to do so, while 23.7 percent cited financial restraints and 17.6 percent said they did not have anyone they like enough to get married. The survey also showed that more of the people working for larger companies thought the marriage was necessary, with 43.8 percent of those working at large conglomerates saying so. Some 40 percent of those working at middle-market enterprises and 38.7 percent of workers at small and medium-sized enterprises thought so. South Korean law sorts businesses depending on its assets, with those having at least 10 trillion won ($6.9 billion) categorized as large conglomerates, companies with assets between 500 billion won and 5 trillion won defined as middle market enterprises, and the firms with smaller assets categorized as small and medium-sized enterprises. A 2024 report by Statistics Korea showed that the monthly salary for employees of large conglomerates in 2022 was 5.91 million won ($4,093), over twice that of those working at small and medium-sized companies.

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