The Star Malaysia

Who wants to be a civil servant?

In a tough market, young South Koreans dream for the security of government jobs instead of tech innovation and K-pop success.

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FOR more than three years, Kim Ju-hee has been studying full time for an exam that feels like her only shot at a good life in South Korea.

She’s lost count of how many times she’s taken the nation’s civil service exam and failed – though she thinks it’s been at least 10. The 26-year-old is not sure what she’ll do if she fails again, so she figures that spending more than eight hours a day studying for her next try, on April 6, makes sense.

Kim hopes to become a government tax clerk, which offers a starting salary of about US$17,000 (RM69,117) and work for the government until retirement.

“There just aren’t other good jobs,” she says in a phone interview from her home in Seoul, where she lives with her parents.

The most sought-after careers among teenagers and young adults in South Korea, Asia’s fourth-largest economy, are government jobs they can count on to get them to their golden years, not jobs innovating and helping companies grow in the private sector.

Analysts say it’s a symptom of the nation’s slowing economic growth and competitio­n from China in export-driven industries that young South Koreans, about a fifth of the 51 million population, are flocking to what they consider risk-free government jobs not vulnerable to the vicissitud­es of the economy.

The situation is particular­ly concerning because it was private companies in sectors like electronic­s, autos and shipbuildi­ng that fuelled South Korea’s rapid growth from one of the world’s poorest nations in the 1960s into an economic powerhouse, analysts say.

Many young people in South Korea say they don’t expect non-government job prospects to improve anytime soon despite a host of measures announced by South Korean President Moon Jae-in nearly a year ago to boost employment, including government stipends to companies.

Unemployme­nt among those ages 15 to 29 reached 11.6% last spring – a level Moon called catastroph­ic, compared with a jobless rate that hovered between 3% and 4% for the rest of the country’s workforce. Taking into account young adults who are working part-time jobs or studying for an employment exam like Kim, nearly one in four are out of a job. By comparison, in the United States, unemployme­nt among those ages 15 to 24 fluctuated between 8% and 9% in 2018. (South Korea uses a different age bracket to calculate its youth unemployme­nt because of mandatory two-year military service.)

The desire for stability and security starts so young that one in four middle school students say they dream of one day becoming not a K-pop star or the next Steve Jobs, but that ahjussi (Mr or uncle) in the public sector, according to a government survey from 2017.

Many South Koreans worry far more about jobs and the economy than they do about the nuclear threat from North Korea. Conservati­ves in South Korea who are critical of Moon’s efforts at detente with North Korea point to the economy, saying his focus should be on bettering lives in South Korea, not on engaging with the North.

Competitio­n for South Korea’s 1.07 million government jobs is fierce. In one round of exams Kim took last year, more than 200,000 people applied, and the 4,953 highest-scoring candidates were hired for open positions – an acceptance rate of 2.4%. By comparison, Harvard’s 2018 acceptance rate was 4.59%.

Kim Y.H., 22, who is about to graduate from college in February with a degree in Japanese, recently began studying for a civil service exam to become a customs agent. She says the popularity of public sector jobs was a sign that her generation is pessimisti­c about South Korea’s economic outlook.

“The country won’t guarantee your future, even if you’re a college graduate,” she says.

“So of course we want to go with the most stable path that’s out there.”

One research report published last year estimated that as many as half a million South Koreans were studying for civil service exams full time instead of working. In 2017, the Hyundai Research Institute esti- mated that the economic cost from the lost work potential of so many young people spending years studying to get government jobs, rather than joining the private workforce, was more than US$15bil (RM61bil).

Moon’s administra­tion has tried to encourage employment among young adults by paying small and medium-sized businesses to hire them, and by offering government-matched savings programmes for young workers. He has also pledged to add 174,000 government jobs by 2022 to meet the heightened demand.

Some analysts, however, say the administra­tion’s stopgap measures won’t do much to fix the problems underlying the push for government jobs.

“There isn’t the expectatio­n that you’ll grow or get good treatment in the private sector. People choose stability over risk or challenge,” says Joo Won, one of the authors of the Hyundai study.

“There are only so many public sector jobs the government can create. It won’t fix the situation.”

Many analysts point to the widening gap between the behemoth family-owned con- glomerates that dominate the South Korean economy, such as Samsung and LG, and other companies.

Large corporatio­ns including the chaebol, as they are known, accounted for about half of the revenue in South Korea in 2017 but provided only 20% of the jobs in the country, according to the most recent figures available from the government.

And while their share of the economy grew, the number of jobs they offered dropped, because of consolidat­ion and downsizing within the corporatio­ns amid the economic slowdown.

That polarisati­on means stark disparity in income and working conditions between those employed by the conglomera­tes and those employed elsewhere – with starting salaries at large corporatio­ns averaging about US$36,000 (RM 146,370), compared with approximat­ely US$24,000 (RM97,580) at smaller companies – fuelling intense competitio­n for a decreasing number of coveted jobs.

“If you work for a small or medium-sized company, you become a second-class citizen with a fraction of the income, long hours and poor benefits,” says Kwon Soon-won, a business professor at Sookmyung University in Seoul.

Those without the impressive resumes increasing­ly needed for jobs at the top companies – internship­s, perfect grades, proficienc­y in a foreign language or all three – are turning to civil service exams.

Applicants to civil service exams tripled from 1995 to 2016, according to a report by the Seoul Youth Guarantee Center. One online bookseller says it saw a 73.5% increase in sales of civil service exam prep books in 2016 compared with the previous year.

Kwon says South Korea’s high education level is part of the problem – although 70% of those ages 24 to 35 have college degrees, the economy hasn’t kept pace by creating enough quality jobs to meet the increased expectatio­ns of those graduates.

Kim Eun-ji, 26, certainly feels that way. With an economics degree from Chung-Ang University, a Top 10 college in Seoul, she applied to more than 50 jobs at a wide range of companies big and small but never got past first-round interviews.

“If I think about how many people there are like me in the country, it just feels pointless,” she says, leaving an employment centre in Seoul.

She has been studying for a government­issued computeris­ed accounting licence to better her employment prospects. Among her friends who graduated around the same time she did in early 2016, only about half are employed full time, Kim says.

Her roommate, who keeps deferring her college graduation, has been making a modest but steady income publishing romance novels online, which strikes her as a more viable option at a steady income than traditiona­l employment.

As a kid, Kim Ju-hee had dreamed of becoming a singer or a teacher. But as an eighth-grader, hearing how hard it was to get a stable job, she set her sights on becoming a bureaucrat.

She’s gotten close to giving up, occasional­ly applying to other jobs or working part time here and there. But she worries that if she gives up, she’ll have spent years of her life in vain because none of what she studied for the exam will be useful for other jobs.

“The world is harsher than I thought,” she says.

 ?? — AFP ?? Desire for stability: Many South Koreans worry far more about jobs and the economy than they do about the nuclear threat from North Korea, like this jobseeker at a jobs fair in Seoul last November.
— AFP Desire for stability: Many South Koreans worry far more about jobs and the economy than they do about the nuclear threat from North Korea, like this jobseeker at a jobs fair in Seoul last November.
 ?? — Reuters ?? Bureaucrat­ic staying power: While boy band BTS may be going places (no, that Grammy award is not theirs), a government survey shows that one in four middle-school students in South Korea dream of one day becoming not a K-pop star or the next Steve Jobs, but that ‘ahjussi’ in the civil service.
— Reuters Bureaucrat­ic staying power: While boy band BTS may be going places (no, that Grammy award is not theirs), a government survey shows that one in four middle-school students in South Korea dream of one day becoming not a K-pop star or the next Steve Jobs, but that ‘ahjussi’ in the civil service.

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