South China Morning Post

Scepticism over foreign domestic helpers scheme

- Seong Hyeon Choi vincent.shchoi@scmp.com

South Korea’s pilot plan to allow families to hire Southeast Asian domestic workers, aimed at easing the burden of household chores and childcare, and addressing the world’s lowest birth rate, is drawing debate over the programme’s effectiven­ess and potential cultural barriers and discrimina­tion.

The Ministry of Employment and Labour and city authoritie­s in Seoul are reportedly reviewing a scheme to bring domestic helpers from countries, including the Philippine­s, to help families simultaneo­usly work and raise children.

“Within the first half of this year, we will draw up detailed plans on how to introduce the foreign domestic worker system, including when and how many workers will be involved” in the pilot, an official said this month.

South Korea currently only allows Chinese nationals of Korean descent to work as foreign domestic workers. They receive around 13,000 won (HK$76.6) per hour, according to media reports, have a union and are given a working visit visa.

The discussion over accepting foreign domestic workers from Southeast Asia was first brought up by Seoul Mayor Oh Se-hoon in September.

According to Statistics Korea, the country’s birth rate plummeted to 0.78 in 2022, ranking at the bottom among the 38 nations in the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t, despite the government spending 2.8 trillion won over the past 16 years to tackle the problem.

While paternity and maternity leave is available, Korean working culture can be intense, so that period off is not always properly used. And although men did not do housework or look after children in the past and more are doing so now, many families still find it hard to strike a healthy balance between the workplace and home.

“It is now time for our society to build a more tightly knit system to allow people to work and raise children at the same time,” Oh said in a Facebook post last month. “There are voices against the [foreign domestic worker plan], but there is no good and evil in the system. We simply need to take the advantages it presents.”

Oh also cited Nobel laureate and economist Michael Kremer, who said South Korea needed an immigratio­n policy and highlighte­d Hong Kong and Singapore as examples of cities that had started special visa schemes for foreign domestic workers.

South Korea plans to issue E-9 visas – a non-profession­al stay permit of up to three years – for such helpers by adding domestic work to the list of fields allowed under the employment permit system. Families in Seoul can start hiring workers through certified service providers later this year.

During the pilot, foreign domestic workers will earn a minimum wage of 9,620 won per hour, over 30 per cent lower than that of Korean domestic helpers, who earn an average of 15,000 won per hour. Foreign helpers are also likely to commute rather than work as live-in helpers. There were no details given on where the overseas workers might live in South Korea.

Lee Sang-lim, a research fellow at the Korea Institute for Health and Social Affairs, said the government considered the high cost of childcare and poor work-family balance as the key cause of the country’s population woes. Government statistics showed that the average household monthly spend on childcare was about 976,000 won in 2021, up from 869,000 won in 2018. Meanwhile, the legal working week is 52 hours, one of the world’s longest.

While women often used to drop out of the workforce after having children, now there are more dual-income families.

Still, Lee said the pilot policy “wouldn’t have much effect” if foreign workers’ wages eventually grew to become comparable to that of a local’s, as there would be little incentive to hire people from overseas. “For example, about 15 to 20 years ago, there were a lot of Chinese nationals of Korean descent serving in restaurant­s. Now they are all gone because their wage has gone up to almost the same level as Korean workers,” Lee said.

While it might seem cheaper to employ them now, “it will eventually adjust to the market level”, he said, amid competitio­n to hire during labour shortages pushing up wages.

Lee Byung-hoon, a sociology professor at Chung-Ang University in Seoul, questioned if the programme would bear fruit given few people were likely to trust an outsider to take care of their children.

“I think the cultural barrier would play a role in easily leaving their child to foreigners,” he said.

South Korea is a largely homogenous society, and cultural minorities are known to face social exclusion or discrimina­tion.

Lee said South Korea had to reform education and the intense work culture to encourage couples to have children.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China