China Daily Global Edition (USA)

S. Korean president calls for job-creating extra budget

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SEOUL — South Korean President Moon Jae-in on Monday asked parliament to approve a supplement­ary budget aimed to create jobs amid the record-level unemployme­nt rate of youths.

He became the country’s first leader to make a speech in the National Assembly to only demand the passage of the extra budget. The Moon government allocated $10 billion for the extra budget plan.

The new president, who took office a month earlier, said in a televised address that the youth unemployme­nt may become a national disaster without special measures.

The jobless rate among those aged 15-29 surged to the highest 11.2 percent in April since the relevant data began to be compiled by the statistica­l agency.

Moon said the high youth unemployme­nt was a “heartrendi­ng” situation for the parents of college graduates.

The country’s economic paradigm, Moon said, must be changed into the one that achieves the goal of growth by creating decent jobs. At the centerofpe­ople’shardships­wasthe unemployme­nt, Moon said. immediate

The president also emphasized the need to narrow income inequality. In the past five quarters, households in the bottom 20 percent income bracket saw their income keep falling, while income for the upper 20 percent bracket kept rising.

The upper 10 percent income bracket took about half of the income of all households in South Korea, Moon said.

To tackle the widening income gap and the high youth jobless rate, the Moon government will spend fiscal funds to create jobs in the public sector first.

The supplement­ary budget only for job creation was anticipate­d to create about 110,000 jobs.

Moon admitted that the budget scheme would merely become an emergency action, vowing to pour all of the government’s policy capabiliti­es into the job creation together with the private sector in the long run.

Meanwhile, Moon’s approval rating rebounded last week despite the controvers­y over the nomination of new cabinet members, a survey showed on Monday.

According to the Realmeter poll, his support was 78.9 percent last week, up 0.8 percentage points from the previous week.

The result was based on a survey of 2,022 voters conducted from last Monday to Friday.

During last week’s parliament­ary confirmati­on hearings, controvers­ies emerged over foreign minister nominee and the antitrust watchdog nominee, but South Koreans seemed to support Moon’s nomination­s.

 ?? JEON HEON-KYUN / GETTY IMAGES ?? South Korean President Moon Jae-in shakes hands with lawmakers after a speech to the National Assembly on Monday in Seoul.
JEON HEON-KYUN / GETTY IMAGES South Korean President Moon Jae-in shakes hands with lawmakers after a speech to the National Assembly on Monday in Seoul.
 ?? CHRISTOPHE PETIT TESSON / REUTERS ?? French President Emmanuel Macron and wife Brigitte, vote in the first of two rounds of parliament­ary elections in Le Touquet, France, on Sunday.
CHRISTOPHE PETIT TESSON / REUTERS French President Emmanuel Macron and wife Brigitte, vote in the first of two rounds of parliament­ary elections in Le Touquet, France, on Sunday.

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