Viet Nam News

Quiet quitting: Why more than half of South Koreans are doing it

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More than half of South Korea’s workers are choosing to do minimal work at their jobs without actually resigning, a survey showed yesterday, indicating that the global trend of “quiet quitting” is growing more prominent among workers here.

Local job search website Incruit recently conducted a survey of 1,097 employees across the country about quiet quitting, in which 51.7 per cent said they have done so.

The term, coined in the early 2020s, refers to an employee doing the absolute minimum requiremen­ts of their job and putting no extra time or effort into it, so as not to put work at the center of their life. According to proponents, it is “quitting the idea of going above and beyond” one’s responsibi­lities at work, and instead putting the majority of one’s time and efforts into other things that matter in one’s life.

The survey showed that 57.4 per cent of

South Korea’s workers between their eighth and 10th years of work have quietly quit, while 56 per cent of those between their fifth and seventh years have also stopped going above and beyond at work. Some 54.7 per cent of those who have been at their job for 17 to 19 years have also quietly quit in their minds.

The leading cause behind quiet quitting in South Korea is “dissatisfa­ction with the salary and benefits at their current company”, chosen by 32.6 per cent of respondent­s. It was followed by “I have no enthusiasm about working at the company (29.8 per cent)”, and “I’m preparing to change jobs (20.5 per cent)”.

About 65.8 per cent of the respondent­s view a colleague quietly quitting as “a positive thing”.

Recent numbers show that South Korea’s workers have a relatively low level of satisfacti­on toward their jobs and life as a general, which is possibly why so many are choosing to do only the bare minimum at work.

Statistics by the Organisati­on of Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t show that South Korea’s life satisfacti­on was 35th among the 38 OECD member states as of 2022. Rating their general satisfacti­on with life on a scale from 0 to 10, South Koreans on average gave a 5.95.

Local surveys indicate that such a low average level of life satisfacti­on may be linked to the equally low level of satisfacti­on South Koreans have with their jobs. In a January survey by Blind, a local app designed for anonymous discussion­s among employees, in which 50,216 people participat­ed, respondent­s gave their job satisfacti­on an average of 41 points out of 100.

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