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S. Korea to provide full support to boost industrial competitiveness

South Korean Finance Minister Hong Nam-ki (2nd from R) speaks in a meeting with officials on how to boost industrial competitiveness at a building in central Seoul on Oct. 11, 2019. (Yonhap)
South Korean Finance Minister Hong Nam-ki (2nd from R) speaks in a meeting with officials on how to boost industrial competitiveness at a building in central Seoul on Oct. 11, 2019. (Yonhap)

   South Korea will provide support worth more than 2 trillion won ($1.6 billion) each year to strengthen industrial competitiveness, the finance minister said Friday, amid an ongoing trade row with Japan.

   Hong Nam-ki also said South Korea will push for a stable supply of key industrial materials, parts and equipment.
   The move is the latest in a series of South Korea's efforts to reduce South Korea's heavy reliance on Japan in the key industrial sector amid Japan's export curbs.

   In Geneva, South Korea's chief negotiator, Chung Hae-kwan, is set to meet with his Japanese counterpart later in the day in the first step toward resolving the dispute at the World Trade Organization.

   The meeting is the first since South Korea formally filed a complaint with the WTO over Japan's tighter regulations of exporting three industrial materials -- resist, etching gas and fluorinated polyimide -- that are critical for the production of semiconductors and flexible displays.

   Japan also removed South Korea from its "whitelist" of trusted trading partners in retaliation against last year's South Korean Supreme Court rulings ordering Japanese firms to compensate South Korean victims of forced labor during Japan's 1910-45 colonial rule of the Korean Peninsula.

   If South Korea and Japan fail to narrow their differences within 60 days, the WTO Dispute Settlement Body will establish a panel to look further into the case.

   The country's efforts to diversify import sources of the key materials are paying off, Hong said, adding that a South Korean company has begun to use Chinese and Taiwanese etching gases for its production process.

   Also Friday, Hong said the government plans to announce measures this month to help smaller firms cope with a looming shorter workweek. He declined to provide any further details.

   Last year, the 52-hour workweek went into effect for companies with more than 300 employees. Firms with 50 to 299 workers, and those with five to 49 workers, will be subject to the new rule starting Jan. 1, 2020, and July 1, 2021, respectively.

   The move came as many young South Koreans seek to strike a balance between work and life, and it is in line with President Moon Jae-in's key election pledges to enhance the quality of life for workers and help create jobs.

   Still, critics say that the shorter workweek could undermine corporate competitiveness, including in the research and development sector. Some workers also complain that the reduced working hours led to a reduction in their earnings. (Yonhap)
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