Sorrowful Non-Regular Workers... Only 27% Receive 'Paid Leave' When Confirmed with COVID-19
"Only 45% of Non-Regular Workers Feel Free to Use Paid Sick Leave"
Experts Say "Urgent Need for System Improvement and Introduction of Sickness Benefits"
A survey revealed that half of non-regular workers took unpaid leave to quarantine despite testing positive for COVID-19.
According to a survey conducted from March 3 to 10 on 1,000 workers commissioned by the civic group Workplace Bullying 119 and the Office and Finance Ubuntu Foundation to the polling agency Embrain Public, 48.6% of workers who tested positive for COVID-19 used paid leave. Among workers confirmed with COVID-19, 30.6% took unpaid leave, and 17.6% worked from home. There were also 3.2% of respondents who answered that they went to work (worked).
When broken down by regular and non-regular workers, 59.8% of regular workers took paid leave, 18.9% took unpaid leave, and 18.1% worked from home. However, among non-regular workers, more than half (53.0%) took unpaid leave, nearly three times higher than the unpaid leave rate of regular workers. The paid leave rate for non-regular workers was 26.9%, less than half that of regular workers, and the work-from-home rate was 16.8%.
COVID-19 Testing Site. Photo is not related to the specific content of the article.
View original imageThe paid leave rate also showed significant differences between union members (70.9%) and non-members (44.7%), as well as between those earning over 5 million won per month (64.2%) and those earning less than 1.5 million won per month (22.3%).
Among workers who showed COVID-19-like symptoms such as the flu but were not confirmed positive for COVID-19, only 20.5% used paid leave. For COVID-19-like symptoms, responses for going to work (29.8%), unpaid leave (25.8%), and working from home (23.9%) were higher than the use of paid leave. Similar to confirmed COVID-19 cases, the paid leave usage rate for COVID-19-like symptoms was low among non-regular workers (10.3%), those earning less than 1.5 million won per month (9.5%), and non-union members (18.0%).
When asked whether they could freely use paid sick leave at their company, 59.7% of workers responded "yes," while 40.3% said "no." The response indicating free use of paid sick leave was 69.3% for regular workers and 45.3% for non-regular workers.
Workplace Bullying 119 also disclosed reports related to COVID-19, including cases where workers "were recommended to resign during COVID-19 quarantine" and "were forced to go to work during quarantine and are now being disciplined or dismissed for unauthorized absence because they could not go to work."
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Following the easing of quarantine measures, the government will reduce the mandatory 7-day isolation for COVID-19 positive cases to a recommended 5-day isolation starting next month. Regarding this, labor attorney Kwon Nampyo of Workplace Bullying 119 pointed out, "Workers in small and medium-sized enterprises without paid sick leave systems and vulnerable laborers have no choice but to go to work or use annual leave even if they contract COVID-19," emphasizing the need for institutional improvements. Attorney Kwon added, "It is time to urgently implement effective sickness benefits as a right to rest when sick."
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