Direct Answer: South Koreans put in long hours thanks to a survival mentality deeply ingrained during the country’s rapid post-war industrialization, along with a rigid corporate hierarchy where “presence” is often valued more than “performance”. The government has set a limit of 52 hours worked per week, but Nunchi (reading the room) culture and the prominence of large conglomerate businesses (Chaebols), means leaving before your boss is often regarded as being disloyal. Paradoxically, these long hours have given South Korea some of the OECD’s lowest labor productivity, meaning the “overwork” is frequently a performative ritual rather than being productive in any practical sense.

For HR and Future of Work Experts: Closing the Productivity Gap
The central issue within HR in Korea is the “Presence Trap”— that sitting at your desk equals being productive. South Koreans worked 1,901 hours in 2022, over two hundred more than the OECD average of 1,752; however, their labor productivity per hour is approximately twenty to forty percent lower that of Germany.
The Solution: Moving Toward Output-Based Management
- Decouple Performance from Time: HR has to create “Results-Only Work Environments” (ROWE). Get away from the clock in/out mentality and towards clear Project Milestone tracking.
- I. The “Top-Down” Shutdown: In order to start the cycle of “people looking at their bosses, waiting for them to leave,” senior management should be required to leave work by 5pm.” A number of Korean companies (here are Samsung and CJ) are playing with “PC-off” system that automatically turns off the computer to prevent unauthorized overtime.
- Auditing Efficiency: Not “working hard,” but “working smart.” Utilise software to log time on menial tasks and automate those, giving staff the opportunity to do their jobs during core hours.

For sociologists: The demystification of contemporary neo-Confucianism
There in South Korea, the workplace is not only an institution of employment; it’s a social hierarchy based on the family. It’s all clearly a result of the phenomenon I call “compressed modernity”—the psychological, social pressure that comes down on people when societies are forced to change in just one or two generations from traditional life to modern life.
The Solution: Redefining Social Capital
- Challenging the ‘Nunchi’ Hegemony: Nunchi is the subtle art of reading others’ moods. Around the office, this means “Can’t ain’t ‘cause my boss looks busy”. This, scholars argue, will take a “cultural decoupling” — when individual career success is no longer contingent on collective displays of suffering.
- Expanding the Safety Net: A large part of work overload comes from a “Fear of Falling.” Given how wide the gap is between Chaebol employees and every other worker, they work themselves to exhaustion to ensure they can maintain their “elite” status. If the social safety net were enhanced and the gap between what big companies and little companies pay people reduced, it would naturally tend to reduce a desperation-driven work ethic.
For Expatriates and Would-Be Immigrants: A Guide Through the Cultural Warfare
For a foreigner, the Korean office can be a game of extreme psychological endurance. You’re hugging the line between a guest (who is frequently excused from certain rules) and a teammate (who’s supposed to be miserable with everyone else).
The Solution: The “Expat Boundary” Approach
- S/:Mastery of the “Visible High Value” Method: When you are new, do good work where people can see it, early in the day. That’s when you start to be known as being “efficient” instead of “lazy” for leaving on time.
- Believing in the 3rd Round (Strategic Hwesik [Company Dinners]): You don’t have to stick around for everyone else’s third round of drinks. Go to the first round (the dinner), be an eager supporter of the team, and then abscond with a “hard” reason (family phone call, workout obligation). In Korea, turning up is 90 per cent of the war.”
- Play the “Cultural Bridge” Card: Leverage your outsider status to bring in “ways of working.” Frame departure on time as a means to “preserve peak creative energy for tomorrow’s assignments” instead of simply desiring to get home.
For Fans of K-Culture and Media: Sorting Fact From Fiction
K-Drama fans, especially those who watched Misaeng or My Liberation Notes would often ask themselves if the portrayal of the “tired salaryman” is blown out of proportion. In practice, the drama can be muted. The phrase Hell Joseon has been created by young Koreans to describe a society in which there is little opportunity for a better life – despite years of working hard – due to static wages and high housing costs.

The Solution: Embracing the “Pali-Pali” Environment
- There is also the “Pali-Pali” (Hurry-Hurry) Filter: Everything in Korea has to have been done “yesterday.” This is a culture that perpetuates the long hours because very many of the deadlines are unrealistic.
- The Dark Side of “Hwesik”: I know it may come as a shock, but company dinners are not “parties.” They are “unpaid emotional labor.” When you watch drama characters sitting gloomily at a BBQ restaurant with their superiors — they’re spending an hour working for free during those extra 4 hours.
- Gift of Time Campaign: Support Korea’s local campaigns for “Work-Life Balance” (Waro-bel). This is the growing counter-culture for Gen Z Koreans, who are choosing to value mental health over corporate loyalty.
For Health and Mental Health Advocates: Fighting Junk Food Liberals
Gwarosa is a term for death by overwork in that country, often due to heart failure or suicide in the face of extreme stress. This is a systemic public health crisis, not an individual failure of “time management.”
The Solution: Implementing Radical Micro-Recovery
- Legislation for the ‘Right to Disconnect’: Take a page from France by pushing initiatives that ban managers from messaging employees on KakaoTalk (the leading Korean messenger app) off-duty.
- Micro-Rest Interventions: Because long breaks are stigmatized within culture-wellness advocates promote “micro-rests” — five minutes of deep breathing or body stretching every hour, titled as “brain-refreshing for better output.”
- Normalize Mental Health: In an age where people are ashamed of going to therapy. Major corporations need to institute anonymous, third-party counseling services that are completely separate from HR, so employees can seek help for their burnout without fearing they’ll be seen as lacking the will to climb up the ladder.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is South Korea’s labor productivity so low when its people work much longer than the OECD average?
South Korea is overall a low-productivity mess because of a “Presence Trap,” in which being at a desk is more important than productivity. This fosters a culture of performative overwork and “ritual” presence rather than actual output that isn’t actually as efficient, leading to productivity levels nearly 40% lower compared to other countries like Germany.
What is ‘Nunchi’ and how does it affect office politics?
The ancient Korean art of “reading the room” or the feelings of others is known as Nunchi. In the office, that’s resulted in employees who believe they can’t leave the building until their boss does because leaving “early” will look like a sign of disloyalty or inadequate effort.
What are “PC-off” systems and how can they help with overwork?
The move is being driven by “PC-off” systems — technical interventions the country’s biggest firms are using to automatically pull down the shutters on workers’ computers at a set time. This discourages overtime fudging and imposes a “top-down” shutdown, breaking the pattern of subordinates hanging around work until those above them head home.
What is the meaning of South Korea’s “Gwarosa” in society?
The term “gwarosa” is used to describe death from overwork, such as heart failure or suicide brought on by severe occupational stress. You saw this as a system public health issue linked to the high-stakes culture and the “Fear of Falling” from elite corporate status.
How important is it Attended “Hwesik” (company dinners) in Korean work culture?
Though they might sound like social gatherings, Hwesik are frequently viewed as “unpaid emotional labor.” These late dinners add several hours of work to the day, and are regarded as part of the mandatory job description – where ‘showing up’ is important for team culture regardless of the impact it has on an individual.
References
- OECD (2023). Hours Worked: Hours actually worked per worker on average throughout the year. Data shows South Korea at 1,901 hours vs. OECD average of 1,752.
- OECD (2022). GDP per capita and productivity level. Hourly labor productivity in South Korea was around $49.40, far lower than the corresponding amount for US ($85.0) and Germany ($74.2).
- Statistics Korea (2023). Vital Statistics: Total Fertility Rate. South Korea reported the lowest fertility rate in the world at 0.72 accompanied by “work-life imbalance” and “economic pressure” as the most two significant reasons, according to a survey.
- Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU) (2022). Denouncing Unpaid Overtime and ‘Gwarosa’ Moments. Study on the “grey areas” of the 52-hour workweek.
- The Lancet Public Health (2021). Occupational stress and its related factors in South Korea. Study of the association between long working hours and prevalence of depressive symptoms among Seoul office workers by Chang-yup Kim (Seoul National University).







