Preemptive Employment Crisis Response Zone
Overview
The Preemptive Employment Crisis Response Zone is a system in which the South Korean government monitors regional employment conditions, designates areas showing signs of an employment crisis in advance, and proactively provides customized job support and economic revitalization measures to those areas. This system aims to prevent rising unemployment rates and regional economic stagnation by predicting employment deterioration and intervening early, moving away from the existing post-crisis response. It is managed by the Ministry of Employment and Labor, and designation decisions are based on regional employment data analysis and on-site evaluations.
Main Content
Designation Criteria and Procedure
The Preemptive Employment Crisis Response Zone is designated by comprehensively evaluating various economic indicators, including employment rate, unemployment rate, changes in the number of employment insurance subscribers, and industrial structure changes. Specifically, key indicators include the year-on-year decline in employment rate, decrease in manufacturing facility utilization, and restructuring or closure of major companies. The designation procedure begins with an application from a local government or the Ministry of Employment and Labor's own judgment, and is finalized through consultation with relevant ministries and deliberation by the Employment Policy Review Committee. The designation period is typically one year, and can be extended if necessary.
Support Content
Designated areas receive various forms of support, including:
- Job Support: Job placement, expanded vocational training, employment incentive payments, extension of unemployment benefits, etc.
- Business Support: Employment retention subsidies, management consulting, preferential loans, tax benefits, etc.
- Regional Economic Revitalization: Discovery of region-led projects, infrastructure investment, tourism promotion programs, etc.
- Social Safety Net Strengthening: Livelihood support, housing stability measures, psychological counseling services, etc.
Examples
Notable examples include Geoje City and Tongyeong City in South Gyeongsang Province, which were hit by the shipbuilding industry downturn in the early 2020s; Buk-gu, Ulsan, which experienced a crisis in the auto parts industry; and Seosan City in South Chungcheong Province, which suffered from a slump in the petrochemical sector. These areas showed improvements in employment retention rates and promotion of new job creation during the designation period.
Evaluation and Limitations
While this system receives positive evaluations for its preventive approach, it also has limitations. Critics point out that the designation criteria are unclear, making it susceptible to political influence, and that the support remains a short-term remedy that fails to induce fundamental industrial structural transformation. Additionally, the actual effectiveness may be limited due to a lack of awareness among local residents and administrative complexity.
Latest Trends
From 2024 to 2025, the Preemptive Employment Crisis Response Zone system has been significantly influenced by digital transformation and carbon neutrality policies. In 2024, the government introduced an employment crisis prediction system using artificial intelligence (AI) and big data, establishing a more accurate early warning system through real-time employment data analysis. In 2025, discussions are underway to include areas undergoing green industrial transition related to climate change response (e.g., areas with coal-fired power plant closures) as new preemptive response targets. Additionally, there is a trend toward strengthening the autonomy of local governments by delegating authority to establish customized measures tailored to regional characteristics. Recently, a pilot program is being implemented to preemptively assess the regional employment impact of global supply chain restructuring in the semiconductor and battery industries.
Related Topics
- [[Employment Insurance]]
- [[Regional Economy]]
- [[Unemployment Rate]]
- [[Job Policy]]
- [[Industrial Restructuring]]
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