Children of multicultural families in South Korea during an event on Hangul Proclamation Day, Oct. 9, 2022 (Courtesy of Yonhap) South Korea is set to establish a government body as early as the first half of 2023 to comprehensively control its immigration policy as Asia’s fourth-largest economy struggles to cope with its declining workforce amid falling birth rates and an aging population.
The Ministry of Justice announced on Monday it put a rule in place to create such a task force, to be under Korea Immigration Service Commissioner Le Jae-Yoo.
“It is one of the justice ministry’s top priorities,” Minister of Justice Han Dong Hoon told lawmakers, referring to the government body for immigration policy. “Early next year, (the plan) will become reality.”
Han has been publicly expressing his determination to establish the control tower since taking office in May.
TO COMBINE IMMIGRATION POLICY AUTHORITIES
The task force, which will operate for only for six months, is set to create a blueprint for the body. The temporary team plans to focus on the development and implementation of mid- to long-term immigration policy plans, the discovery of internal and external cooperation tasks, the promotion of immigration policy improvement, as well as the collection of public opinions.
Currently, the country’s immigration policy is managed by different entities. The justice ministry controls immigration and refugees, while the foreign ministry manages the Korean diaspora. The labor ministry and the gender equality and family ministry are in charge of foreign employees and multicultural families, respectively. The interior and safety ministry manages foreign residents.
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