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At the Signing of the Gwangju Job Project, a Korean Adoption of the Auto 5000 Model

The city of Gwangju and Hyundai Motors finally signed an agreement on January 31 on the Gwangju job project. Known as being motivated by the Auto 5000 model of Volkswagen (VW), the projects objective is to create a joint venture between the city government and the carmaker. Beginning in 2021, the venture will produce new models of small sport-utility vehicles (SUVs) in an industrial complex in Gwangju. The city government will become the largest shareholder (21%), followed by Hyundai Motors (19%). The latter will also develop the new models to be produced and provide the necessary technological support from plant construction, operation, production and quality control to sales. If implemented successfully, the Gwangju plant will be the first new automobile plant producing Hyundai cars in Korea in more than two decades, with a capacity of 100 thousand cars per annum.

The key feature of the project is the alignment of incentives among interested parties to create manufacturing jobs in Korea, at a time when the country’s manufacturing giants are actively participating in the global value chain (GVC). The Korean economy used to rely heavily on the trickle-down effect generated from manufacturing exports, where manufacturing firms exported and invested their earnings back in Korea, thereby creating jobs, directly and indirectly, and this in turn created domestic demand. This is no longer the case, however, with the development of the GVC. Korean manufacturers now invest elsewhere to leverage, among other things, lower labor costs. To incentivize the carmaker, the project keeps the wage at about half the current level in existing Hyundai Motors plants. Also, the local and central governments will offer fiscal benefits to the venture. At this wage level, the project is expected to create some 1,000 jobs (and 10,000 more indirectly). To compensate for the lower wages, the city and central governments will supplement the workers with support for housing, transportation, education, medical services and etc.

While the project resembles the Auto 5000 model in many aspects, the governments role distinguishes it from the German case. The Auto 5000 model was the VW’s proposal to IG Metal, its labor counterpart. The governments role was largely limited to facili-tating the progress of the negotiations between the two main parties. On the contrary, the Gwangju project is the governments initiative to revitalize the local economy and manufacturing jobs in Korea. Started in 2014, the consecutive city governments of Gwangju, later joined by the central government, designed the scheme, brought all parties into negotiation and actively mediated the negotiations towards the agreement.

The project has set an example that manufacturing jobs can still be created in Korea through the cooperation of business, labor and government. In a time when the reduction of manufacturing jobs in developed countries is having far-reaching consequences worldwide, Gwangjus case offers an alternative.  

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