South Korea saw its youth unemployment rate reach 10.4 per cent last month, up more than one percentage point from nine per cent a year earlier.

The number of jobless people aged between 15 and 29 increased from 388,000 to 453,000 over the corresponding period, according to Statistics Korea.

The youth unemployment rate exceeding 10 per cent is arousing social worries, as it was 8.4 per cent a decade ago (in June 2009) and eight per cent five years ago (in June 2014).

Though the Moon Jae-in administration had pledged to prioritise employment of young people, it has yet to create sufficient jobs to satisfy those in their 20s and early 30s. Moreover, the government has been criticised for sharply hiking the minimum wage, which is believed to have hampered active hiring.

The results are that Korea is losing ground to its peers.

For those aged 15-24, South Korea posted 10.5 per cent in youth unemployment last year, according to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).

The figure was higher than the youth jobless rates of countries whose gross domestic product per capita rankings are behind South Korea.

Hungary posted a 10.2 per cent youth jobless rate last year, Slovenia 8.8 per cent, Mexico 6.9 per cent and the Czech Republic 6.7 per cent.

The US has also reduced its youth jobless rate to 8.6 per cent, and Japan has the lowest, 3.7 per cent, among the 36 OECD members.

Konkuk University professor Oh Jung-keun was quoted by a media outlet as saying that “the incumbent administration has only accelerated in raising the statutory minimum wage”.

He said the government had neglected easing regulations and expanding the flexibility of the labour market.

Experts have continued to urge the government to eliminate regulatory hurdles for service sectors, such as finance, logistics and tourism, to create more jobs.

A former government official raised the need to study the case of Japan. He cited that Japan had lowered the unemployment rate among those between 25 and 29 years old to 4.1 per cent last year, which is quite low compared with 9.5 per cent for the same age group in Korea.

He said that Japan, which suffered a long spell of economic difficulties in the 1990s, has been active in providing young people with a variety of job-training and employment information under consistent support from its past and current administrations.

But a professor of the Labour Research Institute of Korea University said the rise in youth employment could be attributable to an increase in part-time or short-term jobs rather than an improvement in stable jobs.

He has called for the government to push for the creation of fundamentally stable jobs, citing the extended unemployment rate.

Meanwhile, South Korea has also entered a critical phase for working age population overall.

The OECD clarified that Korea’s jobless rate came to four per cent during the second quarter of this year, which far exceeds 3.6 per cent in the US for the same period. Japan posted an unemployment rate of 2.4 per cent in the first quarter of the year.

“In the early 2010s [during the third quarter of 2011], Korea and the US recorded unemployment rates of 3.2 per cent and nine per cent, respectively,” a research analyst in Seoul said.

Though the gap between the two countries has narrowed over the past few years, the reversal in jobless rates this year indicates that Korean economy has been sagging and in need of a breakthrough, he added.

The OECD, in its recent economic outlook on some member countries, predicted a four per cent jobless rate for South Korea this year.

This means that the yearly unemployment rate may surpass four per cent for the first time since it posted 4.0 per cent in 2001.

The Paris-based organisation cited the sharp raising of the statutory minimum wage, manpower restructuring among manufacturers and the drop in the working age population, as the main reasons.

It had pointed out that the drastic hike in minimum wage could hold back employment and gross domestic product growth. THE KOREA HERALD