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To: Kirk © who wrote (27940)2/7/1998 11:21:00 AM
From: yousef hashmi  Respond to of 53903
 
Korean labor unions agree to accept layoffs
7.40 a.m. ET (1236 GMT) February 6, 1998

By Reid G. Miller, Associated Press

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - Militant labor unions bowed to international and
domestic pressure today and grudgingly conceded to the need for layoffs by South
Korean businesses, a key element in a government package of economic reforms.

The agreement by the unions was deemed vital by President-elect Kim Dae-jung, the
International Monetary Fund and most Western governments to restoring foreign
investor confidence in the Asian nation's crumbling economy.

The "grand compromise,'' as it is being called by both unions and employers, ended
three weeks of tough negotiations by representatives of labor, business and
government. It will now be incorporated into a bill expected to be approved almost
immediately by Parliament.

"It has been proven again that this nation has hope for the future,'' the president-elect
said. "By this, we have secured a new stepping stone for a leap forward.''

Accepting layoffs was a major concession by South Korean workers accustomed to
lifetime employment. In return, they will be given greater labor freedom, the right of
unions to engage in politics and a strengthened safety net of unemployment benefits.

Other reforms, not covered by the agreement but promised by the government, include
a restructuring of the country's bloated, debt-ridden conglomerates - mostly family-run
enterprises known as "chaebol'' that make everything from microchips to cars and
ships.

A reorganization of the conglomerates was also demanded by the IMF when it granted
South Korea a record $57 billion bailout two months ago. The government maintains
that a new consolidated accounting system will inevitably lead to the dissolution of
chaebol by eliminating the practice of hidden cross-funding by their many subsidiaries.

The president-elect underscored his determination to change the way the chaebol do
business in a luncheon meeting today with heads of the country's 30 leading
conglomerates.

Kim told the industrialists they must restructure their businesses "at whatever cost. The
government will never leave it half done.

"Without (the conglomerates') reforms, there is no future for the country and for the
businesses,'' he said.

At the same time, the president-elect has insisted that the chaebol must have the
freedom to trim their work forces and become more competitive. He called it a key to
wooing back foreign investors who fled the country last year, aggravating a financial
crisis.

"This agreement is not a simple statement. It's a grand national compromise for
coexistence, not one-sided control,'' said Han Kwang-ok, an adviser to the
president-elect.

News of the pact sent closing stock prices up 2.3 percent on the Seoul exchange.

Two rival national labor umbrella groups endorsed the agreement as an "inevitable''
compromise.

Park In-sang, head of the larger Federation of Korean Trade Unions said: "It's painful
to accept layoffs, but what we have agreed on is the second-best choice.''

In the past month, international investors, IMF officials, the United States and other
governments have paraded through Seoul, all urging the unions to relax their opposition
to layoffs. Now, layoffs are virtually impossible without the approval of labor unions or
a court.

Representatives from the unions, management and the government began last month to
discuss ways to share the pain of rebuilding South Korea's economy.

But the negotiations quickly stalemated over how unions would be compensated for
accepting layoffs that are expected to drive up to 1 million workers out of their jobs by
the end of this year.

The unions had been threatening nationwide strikes if a bill went to Parliament without
their consent.