South Korea's Q2 employment growth reached its lowest level in nearly five years, adding only 32,000 jobs year-over-year despite a semiconductor-driven export surge. The employment rate fell 0.3 percentage points to 63.2% in Q2, the first decline for a second quarter since 2020. The slowdown reflects the semiconductor industry's limited job creation capacity and cost pressures from Middle East tensions, raising concerns about jobless growth as manufacturing shed 97,000 positions—the steepest drop in 22 quarters.
According to the Korea Statistical Information Service (KOSIS), the average monthly number of employed persons in Q2 increased by only 32,000 compared to the same period last year. This represents the smallest increase in 21 quarters since Q1 2021, when employment fell by 380,000 during the COVID-19 period. The Q2 employment rate of 63.2% marked a 0.3 percentage point decline from a year earlier—the first Q2 decline since 2020 when it dropped 1.3 percentage points. Across all quarters, this was the first decline in six quarters since Q4 2024.
Manufacturing employment decreased by 97,000 year-over-year in Q2, the largest decline in 22 quarters since Q4 2020 when it fell by 107,000. Construction and wholesale/retail sectors—key indicators of domestic demand—also shed jobs, with construction losing 39,000 positions and wholesale/retail losing 44,000. Construction job losses widened from the previous quarter's decline of 25,000, while wholesale/retail turned negative for the first time in five quarters since Q1 last year when it decreased by 61,000.
Employment among youth aged 15-29 decreased by 215,000 in Q2 compared to the same period last year, marking the 15th consecutive quarter of decline since Q4 2022. Professional, scientific, and technical services—sectors affected by artificial intelligence adoption—continued their downward trend with 88,000 fewer jobs, the third consecutive quarterly decline. This category includes research and development, scientific services, architecture, various professional services, and specialized professions such as legal, accounting, tax, and medical services.
The Bank of Korea's report released on the 16th analyzing real economic and employment conditions after the Middle East war noted that "employment declines expanded in manufacturing, construction, and agriculture/forestry/fisheries where cost burden increased significantly," and "negative impacts were particularly pronounced in small and medium-sized enterprises that are relatively vulnerable to shocks." While the overall industrial impact from the Middle East war was not severe, cost increases led to employment contraction centered on manufacturing and small enterprises.
The Ministry of Economy and Finance lowered its 2026 employment growth forecast from 160,000 to 150,000 in its "Second Half 2026 Economic Growth Strategy" announced on the 14th, considering downside risks from renewed Middle East tensions. This represents 40,000 fewer jobs than last year's employment increase of 190,000. The adjustment contrasts with the ministry's decision to raise the 2026 economic growth forecast from 2.0% to 3.0%, reflecting strong semiconductor-driven exports. A ministry official explained that "growth increases are mainly coming from the semiconductor sector, but semiconductors have a low employment inducement coefficient, limiting job creation."
Policy authorities plan to prepare a "Youth Employment Recovery Plan" during Q3 2026, which includes training more than 200,000 specialized workers in advanced industries and creating more than 200,000 quality private and public sector jobs. For sectors experiencing recent employment difficulties such as manufacturing and construction, the government will analyze trends and factors while mobilizing all available policy tools by sector to devise response measures.
What caused South Korea's Q2 2026 employment to reach a 5-year low?
Q2 employment increased by only 32,000 year-over-year due to the semiconductor industry's limited job creation capacity despite export growth, combined with cost pressures from Middle East tensions that particularly affected manufacturing, construction, and small enterprises.
How many consecutive quarters has youth employment declined in South Korea?
Youth employment (ages 15-29) has declined for 15 consecutive quarters since Q4 2022, with Q2 2026 showing a decrease of 215,000 jobs compared to the same period last year.
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