Oman Daily Observer

BOYS ONLY?

- JUNG HAWON

In her year-long quest for a job, South Korean college graduate Casey Lee has faced a barrage of personal and contradict­ory questions. “One company asked if I had a boyfriend and when I’d get married,” she said. “Another asked why I didn’t have a boyfriend and wondered if someone like me who had no plan to get married soon was trustworth­y enough or had a personalit­y issue.” Women often struggle to find a foothold in South Korea’s male-dominated corporate culture and a series of firms have now been caught allegedly using sexist recruitmen­t targets to keep it that way.

Lee’s first interviewe­r complained that women tended to quit their positions once they had a child, while the other launched a tirade against “irresponsi­ble young women” like her — she is 25 and single — for abandoning their responsibi­lity to have children “for the country’s future”.

“I wanted to scream out loud, ‘I’m only here to get a job!’” she said, adding male applicants in the same groupinter­view sessions were rarely asked similar questions.

Lee is still looking for work, despite a degree from Seokyeong university in Seoul.

She is not an isolated case, and evidence points to some firms in the world’s 11thlarges­t economy discrimina­ting against systematic­ally women.

Three of South Korea’s top four banks have been embroiled in accusation­s they set ratios for male and female recruitmen­t, lowering women’s test and interview scores and raising men’s to hit the target.

A total of 18 executives have been charged or convicted, including the chairman of Shinhan Financial Group, the country’s second-biggest lender.

And last week the Supreme Court upheld a four-year jail sentence given to the former CEO of state-run Korea Gas Safety Corp (KGS) for offences including bribery and violating equal opportunit­ies laws.

Despite its economic and technologi­cal advances the South remains a patriarcha­l society, and has one of the world’s thickest glass ceilings for women. UNDERMININ­G SOCIAL TRUST Only 2.7 per cent of the 15,000 top executives at the country’s 500 biggest firms are female, a government survey showed last year.

At 36.7 per cent, the South also has the widest gender pay gap among the OECD club of advanced economies.

Jobs at state-run firms such as KGS are in high demand as they offer lifetime employment, but on former CEO Park Kidong’s instructio­ns seven qualified women applicants were eliminated — including the top scorer among the 31 finalists — and replaced by poorer-performing men.

Park “excluded women without legitimate reason by ordering his subordinat­es to manipulate test scores...seriously underminin­g social trust”, the Supreme Court said in its ruling.

Park claimed women would disrupt the firm’s operations by taking maternity leave.

In the conservati­ve South, many married women — whether working or not — are expected to take sole responsibi­lity for household chores and childcare, with the double burden seen as a major cause of the country’s paltry birthrate, the lowest in the world.

With daycare centres lacking and the country’s working hours notoriousl­y long, many women quit their jobs after becoming mothers. CASHING IN Recruitmen­t is highly competitiv­e at the best of times in the South, and doubly so in potentiall­y lucrative banking.

Cho Yong-byoung, chairman of Shinhan Financial Group — the South’s secondlarg­est finance house — was charged two weeks ago with violating equal opportunit­ies laws for ordering subordinat­es to maintain a 3:1 ratio between male and female recruits.

According to state regulators, number four KEB Hana Bank set a 4:1 target for new hires in 2013 and ended up taking on 5.5 men for each woman. Without discrimina­tion the ratio would have been almost equal, officials said.

Seven of its managers are on trial, one telling the court that the company’s clients were mostly men and “feel more comfortabl­e” with male staff who can “smoke or drink more freely”. But sentences can be token. Three senior managers of KB Kookmin Bank — the country’s top lender — were convicted last month of lowering test scores for 112 female applicants and raising those of 113 men.

“The accused deserved criticism for changing the fate of many job applicants and causing so great a sense of betrayal and despair in their hearts,” the court said.

But the offenders’ personal responsibi­lity was limited, it went on, as they were simply “following social customs”.

The trio were given suspended jail terms and the bank fined a meagre five million won ($4,500).

“South Korean women are fighting on an extremely unequal playing field that doesn’t seem to have changed for decades,” Bae Jinkyung, head of the Korea Women Workers’ Associatio­n, told reporters.

“In such an unfair world as this, how hard should women try to climb the ladder — if we can get our hands on the ladder at all?”

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