Business Day

South Korea fails to reach agreement with striking truckers

- Joyce Lee and Heekyong Yang /Reuters

South Korea failed to reach agreement with a striking truckers’ union in the first session of talks on Monday, the fifth day of a nationwide walkout, the union said, as supply chain glitches worsen and concrete runs out at building sites.

The government, which estimates daily losses at about 300billion won ($225m) as supplies of cement and fuel for petrol stations run short, raised its warning of cargo transport disruption to the highest level.

The lack of a resolution for the second major strike in less than six months by thousands of truckers demanding better pay and working conditions makes it more likely that the government will legally compel the strikers to return to work.

START ORDER

“The transport ministry’s position today was that ‘There is nothing the ministry can answer’,” the Cargo Truckers Solidarity Union (CTSU) said in a statement, adding that the next round of talks had been set for Wednesday.

The union said it asked the government to withdraw steps towards issuing an “undemocrat­ic and anticonsti­tutional” work start order, adding that it would take a forward-looking stance on each request to reach an agreement.

The law allows use of such an order to tackle a serious transport disruption, and failure to comply can lead to punishment such as cancellati­on of trucker licences and three years in jail, or a fine of 30-million won.

The strike is disrupting industrial activity while Asia’s fourth-largest economy, which is dependent on exports, expects a slump in growth, with the central bank having downgraded its 2023 forecast to 1.7% from 2.1%.

“We need to establish a rule of law between labour and management,” President Yoon Sukyeol Yoon said on Monday, according to his office.

Yoon, who has criticised the strike as taking the nation’s logistics “hostage” in the face of an economic crisis, will hold a cabinet meeting on Tuesday to consider a work start order for truckers to return to their jobs, his office said.

Once the cabinet decides on the order, it will be executed without delay, transport minister Won Hee-ryong said.

The truckers’ union has criticised the government for being unwilling to expand a minimum pay system beyond a further three years, instead of meeting union demands to make it permanent and widen its scope.

Container traffic at ports was at 21% of normal levels by 3am on Monday, the transport ministry said, against Friday’s figure of 49%.

The steel industry, including Posco and Hyundai Steel, saw shipments more than halve to 22,000 tonnes on Sunday, down from the usual average of 46,000 tonnes, the transport ministry said.

Some fuel stations could run out of petrol and paraffin as early as this week, especially in large cities, despite supplies secured ahead of the strike.

MAJOR REFINERS

That is because about 70%-80% of truckers for major refiners, such as SK Innovation’s SK Energy and S-Oil Corp, are union members on strike.

Since last week, work has halted at more than 250 building sites due to scarce concrete supplies, with most sites expected to run out by Tuesday, the transport ministry said.

The cement industry estimated an accumulate­d output loss of about 46.4-billion won by Saturday, with shipments down to 9% of usual levels, the Korea Cement Associatio­n said.

“Non-union bulk cement truck owners, who are implicitly sympatheti­c to, or in fear of, the cargo union’s illegal activities, are giving up cement transport,” the lobby group said in a statement.

THE LACK OF A RESOLUTION MAKES IT MORE LIKELY THAT THE GOVERNMENT WILL LEGALLY COMPEL THE STRIKERS TO RETURN

 ?? /Reuters-Yonhap ?? Bad mix: Concrete mixer trucks parked at a plant due to a strike by a truckers’ union in Anyang, South Korea, on Monday.
/Reuters-Yonhap Bad mix: Concrete mixer trucks parked at a plant due to a strike by a truckers’ union in Anyang, South Korea, on Monday.

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