Jobs for wage workers gain 3.6 pct in Q2
SEOUL, Nov. 25 (Yonhap) -- The number of jobs for wage workers in South Korea expanded nearly 4 percent in the second quarter amid signs of the economy's recovery from the fallout from the coronavirus pandemic, data showed Thursday.
The number of paid employee jobs had reached 19.6 million as of the end of June, up 3.6 percent, or 681,000, from a year earlier, according to the data from Statistics Korea.
By age, the number of jobs for those in their 60s swelled 15.4 percent on-year, or 392,000, marking the highest increase among all age groups.
Those in their 50s followed with 173,000, trailed by people in their 20s and younger with 78,000 and those in their 40s with 55,000.
But jobs for salaried workers in their 30s fell 0.4 percent, or 17,000, from a year earlier, extending on-year declines to a seventh straight quarter.
By industry, the manufacturing sector added 25,000 wage workers in the second quarter from a year earlier, the first on-year gain in seven quarters.
Jobs in the health and social welfare segment jumped by 192,000, with those in the public administration sector rising by 70,000.
The accommodations and food service industries suffered the fifth straight quarter of falls in jobs in the second quarter. Such sectors shed 9,000 jobs for wage workers, but it was smaller than a fall of 72,000 posts three months earlier.
By sex, the number of jobs for men expanded by 245,000 in the second quarter from a year earlier, with that for women jumping by 435,000.
The data had also showed men accounting for 57.4 percent of the total wage-worker jobs in Asia's fourth-largest economy as of the end of June.
(END)
-
(Movie Review) 'Troll Factory' navigates blurred line between fake, real with anticlimactic finale
-
Police officer admits to leaking investigation report into late actor Lee Sun-kyun
-
'Parasyte: The Grey' adapts Japanese alien invasion manga to Korean setting
-
S. Korea, U.S. launch task force to block N. Korea's nuclear, missile programs
-
N. Korean leader sends condolences to Putin over Russian concert hall shooting
-
(Movie Review) 'Troll Factory' navigates blurred line between fake, real with anticlimactic finale
-
'Parasyte: The Grey' adapts Japanese alien invasion manga to Korean setting
-
Police officer admits to leaking investigation report into late actor Lee Sun-kyun
-
Congenital diseases of children born from mothers working at Samsung recognized as industrial accidents
-
N. Korean leader sends condolences to Putin over Russian concert hall shooting
-
S. Korea, U.S. launch task force to block N. Korea's nuclear, missile programs
-
Unification minister slams N. Korea's abduction, detention of S. Koreans as inhumane
-
(LEAD) S. Korea, U.S. launch task force to block N. Korea's nuclear, missile programs
-
Major hospitals in emergency mode amid huge losses over doctors' walkout
-
Seoul bus drivers go on general strike