Short-term employment mobility is fixed among young people and small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), and temporary job growth is fixed in the 60s, showing classification.
According to Statistics Korea, in 2019, 20.9% of registered workers under 30 moved within one year, 55.3% of all employed workers were short-term for less than one year, 75.5% of turnover workers were SME workers (11.1% of large corporations), and 82.7% of SME workers were fixed in SMEs. and 10.2% of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) workers transferred to large companies.
Of the 619,000 employment growth in May this year, 455,000 people aged 60 and over accounted for 310,000 people aged 65 and over, and half of them were super-aged temporary workers.
In May, employment was mostly in their 60s, with the exception of those in their twenties (109,000 people) and those in their 50s (100,000 people), while the number of people in their 30s (-69,000 people) and those in their 40s (-6,000 people) continued to decline.
Employment increased by 19,000 people (0.4%) compared to the previous year in the manufacturing industry. The wholesale/retail industry (-136,000 people, -3.8%) and the personal service industry (-45,500 people, -3.8%) are on a continuous decline, and 44.4% of the youth (15-29 years old) employment rate is over 60 years old. It is lower than the employment rate of 44.5%.
Among wage workers, 355,000 regular workers (2.5% from the same month of the previous year) or 307,000 temporary workers (6.9%) increased, with regular workers accounting for 53.8% of the total employed.
In May, short-term employment increased by 442,000 people (8.0%) to 5,988,000 people employed less than 36 hours, while those with 36 hours and 36 hours or more increased by 775,000 people (3.8%) to 21.14 million.
In May, employment continued the existing patterns of health and welfare services (241,000 people, 10.3%), construction (132,000 people, 6.6%), and facility management and rental services (101,000 people, 7.7%).
According to the Korea Economic Research Institute, the debt-to-disposable income-to-income ratio (DTI) and the principal-to-income ratio (DSR) of household debt assessment by income showed that Korea's household debt increased by 13.8 percentage points from 87.3% of GDP to 101.1%, while the global It was announced on the 10th that it was higher than the average increase of 8.1 percentage points (43 countries) and 5.1 percentage points of the five major countries (G5).
According to the Nara Salim Research Institute, the size of household debt as a percentage of GDP in the third quarter of last year was 101.1%, an increase of 5.95 percentage points from the previous year, with the United Kingdom (88.9%, 5.1 percentage points), the United States (78.0%, 3.3 percentage points), Japan (64.3%, 4% points) and Germany (57.7%, 3.4% points), the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) announced on the 9th.
On the 9th, Deputy Prime Minister Hong Nam-ki said, "Compared to February of last year, just before Corona 19, more than 80% of jobs were recovered. ”, he said, continuing the existing policy.