S.Korea’s jobs in February grow at slowest pace in 2 years

Asia’s fourth-largest economy faces the double whammy of an economic slowdown and a stagnant job market

Job posting board at a government job center in Seoul (Courtesy of Yonhap)
Job posting board at a government job center in Seoul (Courtesy of Yonhap)
Eui-Jin Jeong 3
2023-03-16 11:44:40 justjin@hankyung.com
Economy

South Korea’s jobs grew at the slowest pace in two years last month partly owing to a slowdown in the country’s manufacturing sector due to dwindling semiconductor exports, adding to woes for Asia’s fourth-largest economy already grappling with stagnant growth.

Korea added 312,000 new jobs, or 1.1%, in February from the same period a year earlier, the smallest gain since February 2021 when the country lost 473,000 jobs, according to data released from Statistics Korea on Wednesday. The number of employed people stood at 27,714,000.

The country added jobs for 24 months in a row but the rising pace has slowed for nine consecutive months since May last year when new jobs peaked at 935,000. The on-year gains last month also shrank to one-third of the jobs added a year ago.

The government attributed the slowdown in payroll gains to the high base effect of last year when the country significantly added jobs thanks to the economic reopening after three years of COVID-19 lockdowns.

But the job market was also hit by the economic slowdown and sluggish semiconductor demand, which shaved the country’s main growth driver exports.

Reflecting this, the country’s manufacturing sector lost jobs on-year for the second straight month last month. The sector saw payrolls down 27,000 in February, while the retail/wholesale and transportation sectors also lost 76,000 and 44,000 jobs, respectively.

(Graphics by Sunny Park)
(Graphics by Sunny Park)


Korea’s job growth last month was again driven by jobs taken by those in their 60s and above, with a 413,000 on-year gain. People in their 50s and 30s accounted for 77,000 and 24,000 of the total on-year gains, whereas those in their 20s and 40s lost 94,000 and 77,000, respectively.  

Job losses for young people particularly accelerated last month. The employment for Koreans aged 15 to 29 fell by 125,000 from the prior year, the biggest loss since February 2021, with a loss of 142,000.

Their employment rate fell 0.4 percentage point on-year to 45.5%, while that for those aged 15 and above came to 68.0%, up 0.6 percentage point.

The country’s jobless rate stood at 3.1%, down 0.3 percentage point from a year ago but that for Koreans aged 15 to 29 ticked up 0.1 percentage point to 7.0% over the same period.

GLOOMY MACRO INDICATORS COMPLICATE FIGHT AGAINST INFLATION

The Korean government remains skeptical about any imminent recovery in the country’s job market. The finance ministry earlier projected the country would add about 100,000 new jobs in 2023 versus a gain of 816,000 in 2022.

The dismal job market outlook adds woes to the country’s already lackluster economy, complicating the rate path of the Bank of Korea that temporarily put a halt to its tightening move last month, leaving the country’s policy interest rate unchanged at 3.50%.

BOK Governor Rhee Chang-yong speaks after a monetary policy meeting in February (Courtesy of Yonhap)
BOK Governor Rhee Chang-yong speaks after a monetary policy meeting in February (Courtesy of Yonhap)


The Bank of Korea last month lowered its gross domestic product growth forecast for this year to 1.6% from its previous projection of 1.7%, which was already revised down in November 2022.

Bank of Korea Governor Rhee Chang-yong earlier this month said it is “premature to discuss a rate cut” despite growing risks of a recession in the country and the widening gap between the Korean rate and the US rate, which is poised to rise further, citing still-high inflation. 

The wide rate gap between the US and Korea could accelerate capital flight from Korea as investors look for higher returns.

Korea’s inflation rose 4.8% in February from a year earlier, the slowest pace in 10 months, but the central bank needs to confirm it is falling to the low 3 percentage level by year-end before making a U-turn from its tightening moves, Rhee said.

The central bank’s inflation forecast was cut to 3.5% from the prior 3.6% last month.

Write to Eui-Jin Jeong at justjin@hankyung.com

Sookyung Seo edited this article.

S.Korea’s exports drop for 5th straight month in Feb on plunging chip sales

S.Korea’s exports drop for 5th straight month in Feb on plunging chip sales

South Korea's exports at $50.1 billion in February, down 7.5% on-year and resulting in a trade deficit for 12 straight months  South Korea’s exports shrank 7.5% year over year in February on a plunge in shipments of its mainstay export item semiconductors amid the global economi

BOK holds rates as it lowers growth, inflation forecasts

BOK holds rates as it lowers growth, inflation forecasts

Bank of Korea Governor Rhee Chang-yong chairs a monetary policy meeting on Feb. 23, 2023 (Courtesy of News1) South Korea’s central bank held its policy interest rate unchanged on Thursday as it slashed forecasts for economic growth and inflation although the monetary authority left the do

BOK sees interest rate as tight amid continued drop in exports

 BOK sees interest rate as tight amid continued drop in exports

Bank of Korea Governor Rhee Chang-yong attends a meeting with South Korean lawmakers on Feb. 21, 2023 South Korea’s central bank said on Tuesday it regards the current interest rate as tight, suggesting the monetary authority may hold the policy rate unchanged this week, as a sustained fa

Korean jobs up by 22-month low of 411,000 in Jan, with signs of cooling

Korean jobs up by 22-month low of 411,000 in Jan, with signs of cooling

(Courtesy of Yonhap News Agency) South Korea added the smallest number of payrolls in nearly two years in January, with mainly part-time jobs taken by people in their 60s and older, while the country’s backbone manufacturing industry lost jobs for the first time in 15 months, adding to wo

S.Korea’s trade outlook dismal in Feb with stagnant exports

S.Korea’s trade outlook dismal in Feb with stagnant exports

Containers at a South Korean port  South Korea’s trade deficit in just the first 40 days of this year inched close to 40% of its worst-ever annual deficit last year amid a continued fall of its mainstay export item semiconductors, and to its biggest trading partner China, raising con

Korea’s job growth at 11-month low deepens economic woes

Korea’s job growth at 11-month low deepens economic woes

Asiana Airline’s booth at a job fair for the aviation industry held on Oct. 27, 2022, at Incheon International Airport, South Korea’s main gateway (Courtesy of Yonhap) South Korea’s job growth in October fell for a fifth consecutive month to the lowest in eleven months, boosti

(* comment hide *}