As the government advances shorter working hours as a key policy agenda and, as part of that agenda, seeks to principally prohibit comprehensive wage schemes, the National Assembly has commenced a review of proposed amendments to the Labor Standards Act (“LSA”) that would prohibit comprehensive wage arrangements in principle. In addition, the Ministry of Employment and Labor (the “MOEL”) issued Guidelines to Prevent Misuse of Comprehensive Wage Schemes to Eradicate Unpaid Labor, effective April 9, 2026 (the “Guidelines”). This update summarizes key legislative and regulatory developments relating to comprehensive wage schemes.
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National Assembly Review of Bills to Ban Comprehensive Wage Schemes
Among the pending proposals, the bill commonly described as reflecting a tripartite agreement, proposed by Rep. Kim Joo Young of the Democratic Party, would prohibit comprehensive wage agreements for overtime premiums in principle, while allowing fixed OT agreements mutually agreed to by the parties, provided that the employer pays any additional amounts due for any overtime exceeding the predetermined working hours. |
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MOEL Guidelines to Prevent Misuse of Comprehensive Wage Schemes |
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Outlook and Practical Considerations
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Where it is genuinely difficult to measure working time, and the company believes comprehensive wage practices are unavoidable, the company should maintain clear documentation showing the reasons and factual basis for this operational necessity.
Related Topics
#Comprehensive Wage #MOEL #Labor Standards Act #Overtime #Allowance




