Economy

Filipino caregivers come to Korea amid deepening demographic crisis

Hae-Ryon Choi and Yong-Hee Kwak

4 HOURS AGO

Women stand beside a sign about hiring domestic helpers to work overseas outside an office in Manila (Courtesy of AP via Yonhap)

Some 100 certified caregivers from the Philippines will come to South Korea in August to work as domestic helpers in a country struggling with the world’s lowest birth rate, a fast-shrinking workforce and a rapidly aging population.

The Seoul Metropolitan Government and the Ministry of Employment and Labor said on Tuesday the Filipino workers will begin working in Seoul for six months from September on a pilot basis.

The city government and the ministry will accept applications from Korean households from July 17 through Aug. 6 to hire Philippine domestic helpers.

Those interested in the service can sign up for membership and then apply at the daerijubu.com and dorbom.com websites, according to the Seoul government.

Some 100 certified Filipino caregivers come to Seoul in August to help ease childcare burdens for Korean wives

The service is available to households in Seoul with children aged 12 or below as well as expecting parents, regardless of their income levels, it said.

The central government plans to expand the service across the country next year after the pilot program in Seoul.

The Ministry of Justice separately said it is considering a pilot program under which Korean households can hire foreign residents in Korea as domestic helpers.

ENGLISH-KOREAN SPEAKING FILIPINOS WITH E-9 VISA

Korea’s labor ministry, in partnership with the Philippine government, has already chosen the 100 caregivers aged between 24 and 38 through a screening process.

A government ad to receive applications from Korean households for Filipino caregivers

In the Philippines, they have completed 780 hours of related training on childcare and housework and acquired a government-issued certificate.

Seoul said the caregivers are fluent both in English and Korean as they passed the Korean test, called EPS-TOPIK, and an English interview. The candidates also underwent background checks for a possible criminal record, mental illness and drug use.

The successful Philippine caregivers will come to Korea with an E-9 visa issued for non-professional workers.

They will be given training on the Korean language and culture for 45 hours before leaving the Philippines and be placed on a four-week course in Korea on work safety, prevention of sexual harassment and other tips on life in Korea.


KORAE’S DEMOGRAPHIC CRISIS

Seoul’s Filipino domestic helper initiative is designed to ease rising childcare burdens for Korean wives amid a growing demographic crisis.

Korea’s fertility rate has fallen to 0.7 – a record low not just for the country but globally.

In 2021, the country reported its first-ever drop in population, hit by a sharp fall in birth rates.

Korea is also striving to entice more foreigners to its thinning workforce by easing rules on visa issuance and upgrading skilled foreign workers’ visa status.

Korea's birth rate is the world's lowest

The Filipino helpers will work for up to eight hours a day from Monday through Friday. Shorter part-time work is possible and their maximum weekly work hours will be limited to 52 in line with the Korean Labor Act.

For their work, they will be paid 9,860 won (US$7.14) an hour – the legally-set minimum wage in Korea. If they work for eight hours a day, they will be paid about 2.06 million won a month.

For accommodation convenience, the Filipinos will all stay in a dormitory provided by the Seoul government.

Write to Hae-Ryon Choi and Yong-Hee Kwak at haeryon@hankyung.com
In-Soo Nam edited this article.

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