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Post Info TOPIC: In South Korea, Retirement Can Be Elusive 2012.11.4


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In South Korea, Retirement Can Be Elusive 2012.11.4
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Published: September 12, 2009

SEOUL, South Korea — At the Coex Convention Center in this city’s southern district, a site best known for sleek business exhibitions, Kang Dal-soo, 76, joined the rush to check out the “silver job fair” offering 2,000 private sector and 4,700 public sector jobs for retirees.

 

“It seems I need to learn text messaging in order to deliver flowers,” Mr. Kang said anxiously after an interview at a courier company’s booth. He wanted to work — even though flower delivery was not his ideal job — but he was worried about having to master a new technology and wondered if he would be able to keep the job even if he got it.

Silver job fairs, established to find jobs for people 60 and older, have mushroomed across South Korea in the past year as part of a government effort to assist a rapidly growing population of older Koreans adrift in a changing society.

Until recently, the notion of older people having to look for jobs did not cross the minds of most South Koreans. The traditions of Confucianism hold that adult children should take primary responsibility for the care of their aging parents, who would enjoy respect and high status as sovereigns of the household.

But this practice is crumbling under the weight of longer life spans and changes in family structure, and many Koreans are entering the later stages of their lives unprepared. A government survey released in July found that fewer than 27 percent of Koreans 60 and older had made any provision for their post-retirement years beyond investing in their children’s education.

Now, many of these older Koreans are dismayed to find themselves dependent on their children, often in cramped urban settings, with very different priorities. These days, if adult children are willing to take in elderly parents, they often make it clear that they expect those parents to do household chores and look after the grandchildren, prospects that can make the parents think twice about moving in.

According to the National Statistics Office, 48.3 percent of South Koreans 65 and older were living with their children in 2007, compared with 72.4 percent in 1990.

The government is scrambling now to fill the gap in support, and older job seekers are responding. This year employers have received an average of three applications for every job offered at the fairs, compared with 1.5 applications in previous years.

A government pension system, financed in part by employee contributions, was introduced in 1988 for retirees over 60. But only 28 percent of the working population is covered. Many Koreans of that age, particularly those who worked as farmers, never held jobs that qualified for such pensions. For those who did, many are not receiving the monthly allowance, which averages less than $193, because they chose to take their pension in a lump sum at retirement.

In 2004, the government ordered the National Pension Service to try to find jobs for older workers. By 2006, the project was made permanent, overseen by a new independent body called the Korea Labor Force Development Institute for the Aged. Job placements rose from about 30,000 in 2004 to more than 83,000 in 2006 and 196,000 in the first half of this year.

Despite that progress, there still are not enough openings for older job seekers. So local governments have been creating publicly financed “silver jobs,” like chaperons for children returning home from late-night cram schools, gas station attendants, opinion survey interviewers and wedding officiators.

Then they urged potential private employers to set up booths at silver job fairs. The government offers subsidies to private companies that hire older people and pays half the roughly $163 in monthly wages for each person employed by the public sector.

At the Seoul silver jobs fair, desperation was in the air as 30,000 or so people crowded the booths exploring openings for work most had never expected they would need.

Han Teresa, a job placement counselor who had helped organize the fair, described a man in his early 70s who had flopped down on a chair in front of her. “He said, ‘I thought I’d die a few years after I retired,’ ” Ms. Han said. “ ‘I never believed I’d be alive for another 10 years or so.’”

Lee Eun-seok, 77, who had applied for a job as a garbage sorter, said, “I hope my daughter-in-law asks us to live with them soon.” Her eldest son and his wife had been citing the lack of a spare bedroom for the delay, she said.

But Mrs. Lee’s husband, Han Chul-soo, 78, said he feared that none of their four sons would ever invite them to move in. And so he joined his wife at the fair doing what was once the unthinkable: looking for a job.

Nam Su-hyun, 30, had come to the job fair to submit résumés for his 63-year-old father, who had objected that he would lose face if he had to do so himself.

“I want my father to work rather than just moping at home,” Mr. Nam said.

 

 

출처 : 뉴유유우우오오옥 타임즈 http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/13/world/asia/13silver.html

 

  • What is the age for mandatory retirement in your country?
  • At this stage of your life, are you beginning to make plans for your retirement years? Why?
  • What would be a perfect retirement for you?
  • How would you rate your career in general? (For retired people)
  • Ranging from 1-10, 10 being the highest, how would you rate your career? Why?
  • Where would you like to spend your retirement years? Why?
  • During retirement, where would you like to stay, in the city or in the province?
  • Do you intend to look for another job after you retire? Why?
  • In one word, how would describe your career?
  • Would you like to spend the rest of your life in another country?
  • Is it common in your country to leave for another one after retirement?
  • In your culture, do the children have to support their parents financially after they retire?
  • Would you like to live together with your children even if they are already married? Why?
  • Do you have a pension plan?
  • What are your goals before you retire?
  • Would you consider retiring early if you make it big?
  • Do you consider spending the rest of your career in your present company? Why?
  • Five years from now, what do you think would be the improvements in your career?
  • Do you expect any promotion sometime soon?
  • Are you going to move to another company if you don't get the promotion you are expecting?
  • Do you think you would be able to save enough for your retirement years?
  • What is your major goal before you retire?
  • If you can still work after your mandatory retirement, will you look for another job?
  • Are you planning to open your own business when you retire?
  • What kind of business would it be?
  • What are the three (3) things you would like to accomplish/have before and after you retire?
  • How would you spend your daily life after retirement?
  • Five years from now, what do you think would be the improvements in your career? How about 10 to 20 years?
  • Are you planning to open your own business when you retire? What kind of business would it be?
  • What are the three things you would like to accomplish/have before and after you retire?
  • 출처 : http://iteslj.org/questions/retirement.html

 



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