Quick access to main page (top) Direct access to main contents Quick access to main page (bottom)

Government’s Crackdown on Unjust Labor Practices: How Will the New Monitoring System Affect Your Job?

Daniel Kim Views  

Translation result.

화면
Labor Minister Kim Young-hoon presided over a task-force meeting on normalizing employment and labor on May 7 / Courtesy of the Ministry of Employment and Labor

The government will activate a standing oversight system through the end of the year in industrial complexes with dense concentrations of workplaces to eliminate excessive working hours and unpaid wages tied to misuse of the all-inclusive wage system.

The Ministry of Employment and Labor announced that beginning on the 14th it will launch an area-by-area \”relay inspection\” campaign focused on industrial parks where the all-inclusive wage arrangement is commonly used, with the goal of eradicating the practice of unpaid \”free\” labor that exploits the system.

The initiative reflects the government’s determination to implement the April-issued Guidelines to Prevent Misuse of All-Inclusive Wages and to signal zero tolerance for practices that deny workers their lawful compensation.

Under an all-inclusive wage arrangement, pay is set in advance and disbursed irrespective of actual hours worked. According to the ministry, the anonymous tip line for misuse of all-inclusive wages and fixed overtime logged 42 reports by the end of April — more than three times the 13 reports filed during the same period last year.

Accordingly, the ministry will activate a standing inspection regime in areas suspected of all-inclusive wage abuse to ensure the fundamental principle that workers receive full and fair compensation is upheld.

Inspections will concentrate on workplaces named through the anonymous tip line and on companies within those industrial parks suspected of legal violations. Authorities will inspect one region per month, beginning with the Guro and Gasan digital complexes. In the initial sweep, inspectors will prioritize firms accused of coercing overtime through verbal abuse and intimidation, a case in which a working mother who regularly logged more than 70 hours a week fainted, and companies alleged to have falsified clock-in and clock-out records.

689651_733469_202
Banner for the anonymous tip line using the Blind app = Provided by the Ministry of Employment and Labor

Following anonymous tips, officials will add one inspection region each month and carry out sequential checks. Rather than conducting isolated spot checks, the ministry aims to detect ongoing misuse by systematically linking reports to inspections.

The ministry will also mount a broad outreach campaign to raise awareness of the anonymous tip line for unlawful all-inclusive wage practices. It will deploy a mobile outreach bus to areas with many all-inclusive wage users to guide workers on using the tip line, and beginning on the 18th it will accept reports via Blind, the anonymous workplace community app.

Labor Minister Kim Young-hoon said the ministry will scrutinize every workplace named in anonymous tips and will relentlessly pursue and sanction instances of unpaid \”free\” labor that undermine the labor value of young people and other vulnerable groups. He urged workers who have suffered exploitative or unpaid labor to come forward anonymously without fear.

Daniel Kim
content@tenbizt.com

Comments0

300

Comments0

[Social] Latest Stories

  • Starbucks Korea CEO Fired Over Controversial ‘Tank Day’ Promotion
    Starbucks Korea CEO Fired Over Controversial 'Tank Day' Promotion
  • 25,000 Robots vs. Human Workers: The High-Stakes Battle at Hyundai
    25,000 Robots vs. Human Workers: The High-Stakes Battle at Hyundai
  • Hotel Hygiene Scandal: Cleaner Caught Using Guest Towels to Wipe Toilets
    Hotel Hygiene Scandal: Cleaner Caught Using Guest Towels to Wipe Toilets
  • South Korea’s Tech Giant Kakao Faces First Major Strike in 20 Years
    South Korea's Tech Giant Kakao Faces First Major Strike in 20 Years
  • South Korea’s Aging Crisis: How One Leader Is Redefining ‘Well-Dying’
    South Korea’s Aging Crisis: How One Leader Is Redefining 'Well-Dying'
  • Stop Calling Them ‘Hey You’: South Korea’s New Push for Worker Respect
    Stop Calling Them 'Hey You': South Korea's New Push for Worker Respect

Weekly Best Articles

  • Choi Dong-seok’s Family Bond: How a Simple Engraving Reveals Deep Love for His Children
  • Kwak Sun-hee’s Stunning Wedding Photos: A Celebration of Love and Courage
  • Is ‘I Am a Natural Person’ Just a Big Lie? Comedian Yoon-taek Reveals Shocking Secrets!
  • Health Scare: Why Fans Are Worried About Go Ji Yong’s Dramatic Weight Loss
  • Discover the Winter Gongju Chestnut Festival: A Taste of Korea at H-Mart in the USA!
  • 2026 Spring Wildfire Prevention: How Gyeryong City is Cutting Response Time to 30 Minutes!

You May Also Like

  • 1
    Ukraine’s EU Bid Surges as Hungary Drops Opposition Amid Russian Attacks

    Politics 

    Ukraine’s EU Bid Surges as Hungary Drops Opposition Amid Russian Attacks
  • 2
    Trump Backs Colombia's 'El Tigre' — What It Means for U.S. Relations

    Politics 

    Trump Backs Colombia’s ‘El Tigre’ — What It Means for U.S. Relations
  • 3
    Trump Backs Colombia's Far-Right Outsider—What's at Stake?

    Politics 

    Trump Backs Colombia’s Far-Right Outsider—What’s at Stake?
  • 4
    12.5% Tariff Hit: South Korea Faces New U.S. Trade Penalties

    Politics 

    12.5% Tariff Hit: South Korea Faces New U.S. Trade Penalties
  • 5
    12.5% Tariff Alert: Why the U.S. Is Targeting South Korean Imports

    Politics 

    12.5% Tariff Alert: Why the U.S. Is Targeting South Korean Imports

Popular Now

  • 1
    Marta Kostyuk Makes History at French Open Amid Ukraine Crisis

    Politics 

  • 2
    37 Years in Exile: The Tiananmen Leader Who Just Wants to Go Home

    Politics 

  • 3
    South Korea's Cheongju Airport Faces Crisis as Passenger Numbers Explode

    Politics 

  • 4
    Nuclear Submarine Race: South Korea's High-Stakes Bid for U.S. Fuel

    Politics 

  • 5
    France Finally Admits Complicity in the 1994 Rwandan Genocide

    Politics 

Weekly Best Articles

  • Choi Dong-seok’s Family Bond: How a Simple Engraving Reveals Deep Love for His Children
  • Kwak Sun-hee’s Stunning Wedding Photos: A Celebration of Love and Courage
  • Is ‘I Am a Natural Person’ Just a Big Lie? Comedian Yoon-taek Reveals Shocking Secrets!
  • Health Scare: Why Fans Are Worried About Go Ji Yong’s Dramatic Weight Loss
  • Discover the Winter Gongju Chestnut Festival: A Taste of Korea at H-Mart in the USA!
  • 2026 Spring Wildfire Prevention: How Gyeryong City is Cutting Response Time to 30 Minutes!

Must-Reads

  • 1
    Ukraine’s EU Bid Surges as Hungary Drops Opposition Amid Russian Attacks

    Politics 

    Ukraine’s EU Bid Surges as Hungary Drops Opposition Amid Russian Attacks
  • 2
    Trump Backs Colombia's 'El Tigre' — What It Means for U.S. Relations

    Politics 

    Trump Backs Colombia’s ‘El Tigre’ — What It Means for U.S. Relations
  • 3
    Trump Backs Colombia's Far-Right Outsider—What's at Stake?

    Politics 

    Trump Backs Colombia’s Far-Right Outsider—What’s at Stake?
  • 4
    12.5% Tariff Hit: South Korea Faces New U.S. Trade Penalties

    Politics 

    12.5% Tariff Hit: South Korea Faces New U.S. Trade Penalties
  • 5
    12.5% Tariff Alert: Why the U.S. Is Targeting South Korean Imports

    Politics 

    12.5% Tariff Alert: Why the U.S. Is Targeting South Korean Imports

Popular Now

  • 1
    Marta Kostyuk Makes History at French Open Amid Ukraine Crisis

    Politics 

  • 2
    37 Years in Exile: The Tiananmen Leader Who Just Wants to Go Home

    Politics 

  • 3
    South Korea's Cheongju Airport Faces Crisis as Passenger Numbers Explode

    Politics 

  • 4
    Nuclear Submarine Race: South Korea's High-Stakes Bid for U.S. Fuel

    Politics 

  • 5
    France Finally Admits Complicity in the 1994 Rwandan Genocide

    Politics 

Share it on...