Seoul: President Lee Jae Myung said Tuesday workers' fundamental rights should be guaranteed to help address imbalances between labor and management, vowing support for efforts to strengthen those rights. Lee made the remarks during a meeting with representatives of the Federation of Korean Trade Unions, a major umbrella labor group, as companies push for greater labor flexibility amid intensifying competition despite resistance from workers.
According to Yonhap News Agency, Lee emphasized the importance of guaranteeing workers' three fundamental labor rights: the right to organize, collective bargaining, and collective action. He pledged government support to enhance labor rights, outlining his administration's labor policy, which focuses on improving working conditions and revising relevant laws while acknowledging challenges in addressing long-standing structural divides.
Lee highlighted the issue of polarization stemming from gaps between large conglomerates and small and medium-sized enterprises, regular and non-regular workers, prime contractors and subcontractors, as well as gender disparities, which remain a major challenge. He underscored the importance of dialogue to bridge differences between management, which is seeking greater labor flexibility, and labor groups that strongly oppose layoffs.
"Although this is a difficult issue, open and candid dialogue based on mutual respect and trust can help point the way toward a solution," he said.