As in other democratic countries, the most important actors in industrial relations in South Korea are trade unions. Two trade union confederations lead the way: the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU) and the Federation of Korean Trade Unions (FKTU). On the side of employers and businesses, the Korea Enterprises Federation (KEF) and the Korea Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KCCI) are currently the main actors in industrial relations. In government, the Ministry of Employment and Labour (MOEL) is responsible for managing industrial relations. In addition, the Economic, Social and Labour Council (ESLC), the institutionalised social dialogue body, plays a core role as a forum for and a facilitator of industrial relations; it has 17 members comprising representatives of the social partners and government and experts representing the public interest. Recently, some local governments have paid more attention to issues relating to employment and labour, even attracting investment to create jobs and creating inclusive labour policies in public organisations. In companies with more than 30 employees, a labour–management cooperation body with employee and employer representation must be established.
Public authorities involved in regulating working life
The MOEL is the major public authority responsible employment policies and industrial relations in South Korea. The ministry supports autonomous dispute settlements within the principles of the rule of law, addressing undesirable practices such as illegal strikes, and encouraging mutually beneficial and cooperative relationships between labour and management. It supervises the various standards that both workers and employers are to comply with, covering, for example, labour contracts, rest/holidays/leave, wages, retirement pay, employment relationships and dismissal. The MOEL also seeks to prevent industrial accidents by ensuring safe and pleasant working environments.
The MOEL establishes and coordinates employment policies and strategies, resolving mismatches in the labour markets through an advanced employment service, providing employment security programmes to prevent unemployment and promote employment, and working to create decent jobs by analysing the labour markets and implementing employment services and job creation programmes. It also aims to foster and oversee the employment service industry, formulating related policies and institutions, such as employment insurance policies. The ministry offers comprehensive support for skills development activities carried out by employers, jobseekers and employed people by providing financial subsidies and sharing the cost of facilities. It also seeks to create a culture of equality at work for women, people with disabilities, older people, young people and minors, foreign workers and others, and to build a society based on the spirit of togetherness.
Furthermore, MOEL is responsible for managing the ESLC, the comprehensive social dialogue body established under law at national level. The ministry also manages the regional concertation bodies, made up of representatives of the social partners and civil society, that have been established under the Economic, Social and Labour Council Act. The Korea Labour Foundation is also run under the auspices of the MOEL; it takes a softer approach, facilitating industrial cooperation and labour market innovation. Alongside the MOEL, the Ministry of Planning and Budget plays a substantive role in regulating labour markets and working conditions, since it distributes funds to each ministry.
Representativeness
The Act on the Establishment and Operation of the Economic, Social and Labour Council determines the representativeness of social partner organisations at national level as follows. On the workers’ side, the following are considered representative and may serve on the ESLC: (i) representatives of employee organisations that are national-level trade union associations and (ii) persons who are recommended by employee organisations that are national-level trade union associations and are requested by the chairperson to be appointed. On the employers’ side, the following are considered representative and may serve on the ESLC: (i) representatives of national-level employer organisations and (ii) persons who are recommended by national-level employer organisations and are requested by the chairperson to be appointed. Based on this act, the two national trade union confederations (the KCTU and the FKTU) usually represent workers, and the KEF and the KCCI are their counterparts representing employers.
Trade unions
About trade union representation
In South Korea, the right of workers to join trade unions, as a key constituent of the right to freedom of association, is guaranteed under the Constitution and more specifically the Trade Union and Labor Relations Adjustment Act. In particular, Article 33(1) of the Constitution explicitly in principle confers on workers ‘the right to independent association, collective bargaining and collective action’. Article 5 of the Trade Union and Labor Relations Adjustment Act confirms the constitutional right by stipulating that ‘workers shall be free to establish a trade union or to join it’ and the articles that follow elaborate on this statutory right. It is noteworthy, however, that the Constitution grants the rights to association, collective bargaining and collective action to only some groups of public officials designated in the Trade Union and Labor Relations Adjustment Act. Furthermore, it either restricts or denies the right to collective action of workers employed by important defence industries. The Act on the Establishment and Operation, etc., of Public Officials’ Trade Unions and the Act on the Establishment and Operation, etc., of Trade Unions for Teachers are the items of legislation that set out the details of these circumscribed rights.
Trade union membership and trade union density, 2012–2019
| 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | Source |
Trade union density in terms of active employees (%) * | 9.9 | 10.1 | 10.1 | 10.0 | 10.0 | 10.5 | 11.6 | n.a. | OECD/AIAS ICTWSS database 2021 |
Trade union density in terms of active employees (%) * | 10.3 | 10.3 | 10.3 | 10.2 | 10.3 | 10.7 | 11.8 | 12.5 | MOEL |
Trade union membership (1,000s) ** | 1,781 | 1,848 | 1,905 | 1,939 | 1,967 | 2,089 | 2,332 | n.a. | OECD/AIAS ICTWSS database 2021 |
Trade union membership (1,000s) ** | 1,781 | 1,848 | 1,905 | 1,939 | 1,966 | 2,088 | 2,331 | 2,531 | MOEL |
Notes: * Proportion of employees who are members of a trade union among all employees; ** Total number of trade union members (including self-employed workers and non-active union members, i.e. students, retirees and unemployed people) at national level. AIAS = Amsterdam Institute for Advanced Labour Studies; ICTWSS = Institutional Characteristics of Trade Unions, Wage Setting, State Intervention and Social Pacts; n.a. = not available.
Sources: OECD/AIAS ICTWSS database 2021; MOEL.
Main trade union confederations and federations
There are two trade union confederations in South Korea. The FKTU was the sole official and legal union federation under the two authoritarian regimes from the 1960s to the 1980s. With democratisation, employee organisations became differentiated (both in form and number) as the independent labour movement rose up. As a result of the wave of democratisation after the Great Workers’ Uprising of 1987, a new confederation was launched in 1995, the KCTU. The KCTU has acted as a more radical alternative organisation for workers, while the FKTU has pursued a moderate path of democratic reform. For the past three decades, the two confederations have competed and cooperated on representing workers’ interests in South Korea. The KCTU is more involved and powerful in collective bargaining and wage bargaining at enterprise level, while the FKTU is involved to a greater degree and more skilled in social dialogue at national level. The former is more oriented towards campaigning and social movements while the latter focuses on lobbying policymakers and participating in policymaking.
Main trade union confederations (in order of membership size)
Full name | Abbreviation | Members in January 2017 | Members in December 2019 | Involved in collective bargaining? |
Korean Confederation of Trade Unions | KCTU | 963,035 | 1,044,672 | Yes |
Federation of Korean Trade Unions | FKTU | 954,546 | 1,018,358 | Yes |
Sources : KCTU and FKTU.
Competition for membership between the two confederations has become fierce in recent years. While the FKTU has tried to defend its status as the primary union confederation (in terms of membership size), the KCTU has constantly increased its membership. In particular, the KCTU has made a strategic effort to organise non-standard workers. Facilitated by labour-friendly policies of the current government, the KCTU achieved the status of the country’s primary union confederation for the first time in 2019, which provoked the FKTU. Currently, the confederations organise more than one million workers each.
Since its establishment, the KCTU has strongly emphasised the principles of industrial unionism, seeking to overcome the limitations of enterprise unionism. The Korean Metal Workers’ Union, one of the largest affiliates of the KCTU, has quite successfully reformed its internal structure to move towards industrial unionism, although its bargaining behaviour has not fundamentally changed.
Cooperation between the KCTU and the FKTU is not frequent. Recently, in the public and semi-public sectors, some sector-level organisations belonging to the FKTU and the KCTU have worked together to jointly tackle policy issues.
Employer organisations
About employer representation
The Trade Union and Labor Relations Adjustment Act, the major legislation that governs labour relations in the country, does not contain many provisions regarding employer associations or members’ rights/obligations. The act merely defines an employer association as ‘an organization of employers which has powers to adjust or control its members in connection with labor relations’ (Article 2(3)). Article 29 of the act declares that an employer association, as a counterpart to the representative of a trade union, retains the authority to bargain and sign a collective agreement for its members. Article 30 further requires those with such authority to exercise it in good faith and sincerity. Other than these provisions, the act remains largely silent on the details of the legal relationship between an employer association and its members for the purpose of collective bargaining and other collective relations. Owing to the insufficient and underdeveloped legal rules, as well as the predominant practice, with a long history of enterprise-level collective bargaining, there has been no meaningful advance in formulating legal and actual relationships involving employer associations. However, it is worth noting that in South Korea business associations as interest groups have been far more active, and often successful, in representing the voice of their industries and protecting their interests at nearly all stages of policymaking than employer associations have been in collective bargaining. In this regard, many have recently expressed the view that such business associations should be deemed employer associations under labour law, imposing on them the legal responsibilities arising from that under the Trade Union and Labor Relations Adjustment Act.
Main employer organisations and confederations
The table below provides information on the main employer associations in South Korea.
Main employer organisations and confederations (in order of founding date)
Full name | Abbreviation | Members | Year established | Involved in collective bargaining? |
Korea Chamber of Commerce and Industry | KCCI | 180,000+ (in 73 chambers) | 1884 | No |
Korea International Trade Association | KITA | 70,000+ | 1946 | No |
Korea Federation of SMEs | KBIZ | 658,949 | 1962 | No |
Korea Enterprises Federation | KEF | 4,307 | 1970 | Yes |
Federation of Middle Market Enterprises of Korea | FOMEK | 722 | 1992 | No |
Source: KEF, KCCI, KITA, KBIZ and FOMEK.
Established in 1970, KEF is a business organisation that represents employers of all sizes in South Korea. KEF is funded by its more than 4,000 member companies. It aims to create an environment conducive to business and enhance South Korea’s national competitiveness by building cooperative and reasonable industrial relations. KCCI was established in 1884 as a public legal person by a special act. It represents 180,000 member companies, which include domestic and foreign-invested companies. Internationally, KCCI is an active member of the International Chamber of Commerce and the World Chambers Federation. KBIZ was established in 1962 to represent the rights and interests of South Korean SMEs. It is a non-profit legal entity, founded on the basis of the Small and Medium Enterprise Cooperatives Act of 1961. The organisation’s main functions are making policy proposals to the South Korean government on behalf of its 72,000 SME members and helping SMEs boost competitiveness. KITA was founded in 1946 with the objective of advancing the South Korean economy through trade; it is a major business organisation in South Korea, with over 70,000 members. As an advocate of international trade, KITA serves a diverse range of functions, including providing comprehensive policy support and addressing trade-related issues experienced by South Korean businesses. FOMEK was first established under the name the Korean Businessmen Association in 1992. FOMEK endeavours to foster and develop South Korean middle market enterprises (MMEs), and in 2014 it was officially launched as a legal entity to represent 600 MMEs.
Tripartite and bipartite bodies and concertation
Main tripartite and bipartite bodies
The ESLC plays a critical role as a symbolic and substantive forum for social dialogue in South Korea. It is a tripartite body and a presidential advisory committee. Its predecessor, the Korea Tripartite Commission (KTC), was established in 1998 with the aim of creating social consensus during the severe economic crisis taking place at that time. In 2007, the KTC was replaced by the Economic and Social Development Tripartite Commission, a reformed version of the KTC. However, it was inactive for a decade under two conservative governments.
In 2018, the tripartite actors were actively engaged in social dialogue to rebuild the tripartite body under the initiative of the new government after the candlelight protests of 2016–2017, and they reached agreement on establishing the ESLC with the aim of tackling social polarisation. The most significant difference between the ESLC and its predecessors is its expanded membership. While tripartite actors maintain their central status, the ESLC also includes members representing the interests of vulnerable social groups among employers and workers. It also provides further impetus to establish sector-level social dialogue therein.
This ‘tripartism plus’ system, however, has not always functioned smoothly; there were further conflicts among the different groups in the early stages of the new institution in 2019, immediately after the launch of the ESLC in November 2018. The biggest problem, shared by its predecessors, was that the ESLC failed to persuade the KCTU to join it. The KCTU, the biggest union confederation, does not participate in the institutionalised social dialogue bodies at either national or local level.
At local level, social dialogue bodies – referred to as local cooperation bodies among labour, management, civil actors and government – have been established. Of these local social dialogue bodies, which number 130, only 20% are active. Owing to a lack of institutional resources and actors’ capacities, it has been hard to activate local-level social dialogue.
In addition to the national- and local-level social dialogue bodies mentioned above, South Korea has two further significant social dialogue bodies. One is the Minimum Wage Commission, which decides annually on the increase in the minimum wage. The other is the labour–management cooperation body, which must be established in all workplaces with more than 30 employees and participate quarterly in bipartite dialogue.
Main tripartite and bipartite bodies
Name | Type | Level | Issues covered |
Economic, Social and Labour Council | Tripartite | National | Comprehensive (usually labour laws and policies) |
Minimum Wage Commission | Tripartite | National | Increase in the minimum wage (annually) |
Labour–management cooperation body | Bipartite | Enterprise (over 30 employees) | Wide-ranging issues in the workplace (not wage bargaining) |
Local cooperation body among labour, management, civil actors and government | Tripartite plus | Local | Broad and ad hoc (usually on local employment issues) |
Source: Authors.
Workplace-level employee representation
Regulation, composition and competences of the bodies
Regulation | Composition | Competences of the body, including involvement in company-level collective bargaining | Thresholds/rules – when the body needs to be/can be set up |
Trade union under the Trade Union and Labor Relations Adjustment Act | A trade union is an organisation or group of associated organisations of workers. There are no statutory requirements on the minimum number of worker members. However, an organisation will not be regarded as a trade union (i) where an employer or other person who always acts in the interest of the employer is allowed to join it or (ii) where those who are not workers are allowed to join it | Retains the authority to bargain and make collective agreements for its members. The level on which collective bargaining is predominantly done in South Korea is the company or workplace. Thus, trade unions are involved in company-level collective bargaining | It is not mandatory to set up a trade union, which is a voluntary organisation |
Labour–management cooperation body under the Act on the Promotion of Employees’ Participation and Cooperation | This body must be composed of the same number of members representing workers and employers (that number being not fewer than three but not more than ten persons). Worker members are to be elected by workers, and if a trade union composed of a majority of workers is available, the worker members must represent of the trade union or be persons nominated by the trade union | Retains the competence to consult on matters such as recruitment, placement, education and training of workers; settlement of workers’ grievances; safety, health and improvement of other aspects of the working environment, and promotion of workers’ health; general rules on employment adjustment regarding staff redeployment, retraining or dismissal for managerial or technological reasons; administration of working hours and rest hours. Also retains the competence to make resolutions with respect to matters such as the establishment of an in-house employee welfare fund | A labour–management cooperation body must be established in any business or workplace that is vested with the right to decide on working conditions and employs 30 or more people on a regular basis |
‘A person who represents more than half of the employees at the business or workplace’ or ‘labour representative’ under the Labor Standards Act | An employee | Retains the competence, for instance, to be informed of, consult on and/or make a written agreement with respect to dismissal for managerial reasons, flexible working hours, selective working hours, extended work, time off in lieu, etc., as required by the Labor Standards Act | It is mandatory to elect a labour representative when addressing certain issues specified in the Labor Standards Act |
Source: Authors, based on Korean Law Information Centre.