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Real Reality
Joined: 10 Jan 2003 Location: Seoul
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Posted: Mon Feb 21, 2005 6:54 pm Post subject: "Come back after lunch." Government Office, Bank |
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You go to a government building (or bank). You arrive a few minutes before lunch. Many workers are exiting. One of them says (in Korean), "Come back after lunch."
Has this ever happened to you in Korea?
It is almost like work cannot be done between 11:45 AM and 1:30 PM. |
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Real Reality
Joined: 10 Jan 2003 Location: Seoul
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Posted: Mon Feb 21, 2005 9:36 pm Post subject: |
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| Hub of Asia? |
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mindmetoo
Joined: 02 Feb 2004
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Posted: Mon Feb 21, 2005 9:38 pm Post subject: |
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| Oh well. Poor SOBs have to work until 10 pm at night until their boss leaves... I'll grant them a peaceful lunch hour. |
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Wangja

Joined: 17 May 2004 Location: Seoul, Yongsan
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Posted: Mon Feb 21, 2005 10:14 pm Post subject: |
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For those who may not know the Korean office envirnoment, public and private, the lunch break is sacred. As mindmetoo said, more seriously taken than the leaving time.
It runs from 12:01 to 12:59 - no flexibility. Most people bolt down for lunch and are back 10 minutes later to sleep. Some offices switch the lights out and put classical radio 93.1 through the PA to ensure a relaxing snooze.
It all comes back at 12:58 with the company anthem blaring out to remind us all that it's time to work.
yep, give 'em their lunch break. |
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jaganath69

Joined: 17 Jul 2003
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Posted: Mon Feb 21, 2005 10:22 pm Post subject: |
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| Wangja wrote: |
For those who may not know the Korean office envirnoment, public and private, the lunch break is sacred. As mindmetoo said, more seriously taken than the leaving time.
It runs from 12:01 to 12:59 - no flexibility. Most people bolt down for lunch and are back 10 minutes later to sleep. Some offices switch the lights out and put classical radio 93.1 through the PA to ensure a relaxing snooze.
It all comes back at 12:58 with the company anthem blaring out to remind us all that it's time to work.
yep, give 'em their lunch break. |
Heaven forbid they could ever do something alone. Wouldn't it make sense to stagger the lunchbreaks? Its as crazy as 75% of the country going on the road together during seolal and chusok. |
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Wangja

Joined: 17 May 2004 Location: Seoul, Yongsan
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Posted: Mon Feb 21, 2005 10:24 pm Post subject: |
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| jaganath69 wrote: |
| Wangja wrote: |
For those who may not know the Korean office envirnoment, public and private, the lunch break is sacred. As mindmetoo said, more seriously taken than the leaving time.
It runs from 12:01 to 12:59 - no flexibility. Most people bolt down for lunch and are back 10 minutes later to sleep. Some offices switch the lights out and put classical radio 93.1 through the PA to ensure a relaxing snooze.
It all comes back at 12:58 with the company anthem blaring out to remind us all that it's time to work.
yep, give 'em their lunch break. |
Heaven forbid they could ever do something alone. Wouldn't it make sense to stagger the lunchbreaks? Its as crazy as 75% of the country going on the road together during seolal and chusok. |
Of course (and banks already do) but for 90% it's that rigid time. |
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Squid

Joined: 25 Jul 2003 Location: Sunny Anyang
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Posted: Mon Feb 21, 2005 10:30 pm Post subject: |
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New Zealand, Auckland (most populous city), lunchtime bank tellers=1, customers=8 million.
You just know not to go. |
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Real Reality
Joined: 10 Jan 2003 Location: Seoul
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Posted: Mon Feb 21, 2005 10:33 pm Post subject: |
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You arrive a few minutes before lunch. (11:45)
Your business will take a few minutes (perhaps, less than a minute).
"Come back after lunch." |
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Real Reality
Joined: 10 Jan 2003 Location: Seoul
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Posted: Mon Feb 21, 2005 11:09 pm Post subject: |
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New Zealand, Auckland = Hub of Asia
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mindmetoo
Joined: 02 Feb 2004
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Posted: Tue Feb 22, 2005 3:08 am Post subject: |
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| I guess in Spain and Latin American nations RR would be upset about the siesta... |
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Real Reality
Joined: 10 Jan 2003 Location: Seoul
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Posted: Tue Feb 22, 2005 3:21 am Post subject: |
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....intransigent government bureaucrats, inflexible and militant labor organizations, and a shortage of highly educated individuals with strong English-language proficiency and an international, outward-looking mindset.
As the country manager of a major US firm here said, "We have a very hard time finding people who can think beyond Korea, people who can think strategically, in a global sense."
The tale and tail of the mouse, and the bureaucrat
The government adds concrete (literally) assets, enacts new laws and issues edicts, but changes in the legal code must pass through the Korean lens of people and institutions. Laws and regulations, while numerous, are often deliberately vague so as to give the bureaucracy power in defining and implementing them.
It was traditionally said that the salary of a government bureaucrat was like the tail of a mouse, not enough, in itself, to sustain the mouse - or the bureaucrat. The vague and ambiguous nature of rules and regulations encourages monetary compensation for favorable interpretations. The Swiss-based International Institute for Management Development ranks South Korea's civil servants 35th in the world in efficiency; last year China's were ranked 23rd. As the president of the American Chamber of Commerce, Tami Overby, and others have said, the South Korean government often makes it more difficult, not less trying, to do business. While civil servants in other countries usually try to encourage and help corporations, in Korea many will not budge or show flexibility they if there is the slightest suggestion in the rules that might inhibit or restrict giving help.
Koreans also frustrated by red tape
Foreigners are not the only ones who complain about doing business in South Korea. Korea's small-business people are also upset with the government's bias toward the large over the small, especially among those working in import trade.
'Dynamic Korea: Hub of Asia' - or is it?
By David Scofield, Asia Times (March 6, 2004)
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Korea/FC06Dg05.html |
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