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Core of the Labor Contract Law - Reparations to the Workers in the Case of management misconduct

 

To enhance the effectiveness of law enforcement, the Labor Contracts Act simply and clearly stipulated the losses (punishment) that a company would incur in the event of an offence and the benefits (reward) that a worker would gain from it.
It is designed to pay compensation directly to workers if they commit illegal labor activities. This gave workers the opportunity to take "unpaid income" in addition to their wages.
Indeed, since the enforcement of the Labor Contract Act, there have been a number of malicious cases in which workers who have been bitten by some collectivism have been unaware of corporate misconduct in the pursuit of punitive compensation, or have provoked management to file for dismissal.

 

[The Effects of the Labor Contract Act on Corporate Labor Management]
o Restrictions on the elasticity of employment
- It is difficult to adjust work/wage by obligating labor contract items (work, wages, work place)
- Elastic workforce adjustment due to changes in market and business conditions at any time
o the difficulty of laying off workers
- Difficulty in dismissal if legal cause/evidence/procedure of court proceedings, and burden of double compensation for illegal dismissal
- Increase in staff and costs as evidence is secured and legal procedures are implemented.
o prolonged and rigidity in labor relations;
- the increase in lifetime employment due to prolonged labor contracts and time lapse.
- Difficulty in selection and personnel metabolism of low performers
o Flooding of labour litigation
- Increased malicious lawsuits targeting poor corporate management and loopholes
- Retroactive claims against past unfair treatment are filed at the time of retirement.

 

 

the rise of workers' rights

The sense of workers' rights in the labor market was greatly enhanced in 2008 due to the effectuation of the Labor Contract Law, the advancement of higher education, and the rapid improvement of economic standards. Companies are having a hard time managing their labor because workers are quick to grasp labor laws and insist on even the smallest details.
Collective labor disputes such as strikes and sabotage are also taking place in a routine manner, and unless workers flock to the streets and destroy facilities, the Bureau of Labor and Public Security are also avoiding active intervention against the backdrop of the government's policy to protect workers.

 

[Man]

o Frequent individual and group disputes due to increased awareness of rights
the frequency of labor lawsuits based on labor laws.
Difficulty in flexibly adjusting personnel according to changes in management and market conditions
o 80 and 90後 Decrease in the working spirit of new generation employees
Rising expectations such as working environment, training, and power generation space
Avoid simple work, short-term employment and career advancement
o Changing generations of farmers' workers
Unlike first-generation farmers, we expect the city to be settled (lack of the foundation of life in farming villages).
High education and high level of consumption, sensitive to wage treatment, and equipped with a high sense of rights

 

3. Current Status and Challenges of Human Resources Management in Korea

Korean companies in China are now facing an uneasy reality. Not only are employees clearly aware of their rights, but they are increasingly weighing and holding on to their rights and rights protection issues, and their needs exceed those of the lowest levels stipulated by the law.
In addition, unlike Koreans, who have low workforce liquidity, narrow job spans and lifetime job expectations, the Chinese value the development of self-carrier over short-term compensation and position at work, and a strong sense of individualism and rights protection, so lax labor management and seniority pay systems like Korea are bound to face major challenges after a few years of initial start-ups.

 

 

the limitations of intetation
Even if a loose Korean-style personnel management system is applied in the early days of the start-up of the Chinese corporation, it does not have any major problems. However, when the number of workers increases and the organization grows, Korean-style in-vitro management faces limitations, the phenomenon of over-staffing and post-inflation occurs, and the aging of the organization (aging, real complacency, metabolic congestion, etc.) is likely to occur after more than 10 years of entry. In accordance with the development of the Chinese corporation, if the personnel system is not localized and organized, we have no choice but to encounter a phenomenon where the control of manpower becomes difficult and the administrative efficiency is reduced by the day.

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