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With the Chuseok holiday falling this week, there is a fresh controversy that the government is forcing conglomerates and public institutions to buy the vouchers.?
A 35-year-old female assistant manager surnamed Nah at one of conglomerates grumbled about a 100,000 won ($92.05) onnuri gift card she received last week from her company.?
“I understand the good purpose of giving out the onnuri vouchers, but it is quite inconvenient for me to use the card since I only shop at large retailers,” Nah said.
An onnuri gift card is a voucher that can be used instead of cash at traditional markets only. The government issues four kinds of vouchers: Those worth 5,000 won and 10,000 won are issued in paper form, and those worth 50,000 won and 100,000 won are issued in plastic cards.
Merchants can convert the vouchers they receive into cash at commercial banks. They welcome the government’s effort to encourage more consumers to use the vouchers, but in reality consumers don’t find the vouchers effective or convenient.
“My company used to dole out gas pump vouchers until before last year, which was actually a great gift amid high gasoline prices,” said a 40-year-old senior manager surnamed Kim at a manufacturing giant. “I think large companies are reluctantly purchasing the vouchers, being increasingly cautious of anti-conglomerate social sentiments and the economic democratization initiative.”
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Since selling 10.4 billion won worth of vouchers in 2009, sales of the vouchers have been growing annually, reaching 425.7 billion won last year, according to the Ministry of Strategy and Finance. Until this July, 853.6 billion won worth of vouchers were sold. About 91 percent of the sold vouchers were used at traditional markets, helping boost sales at small merchants.
“It is true that the number of consumers with onnuri vouchers spike at national holidays like Chuseok,” said Jin Byeong-ho, chairman of the Seoul Metropolitan Governance Merchant Association.
But some say consumers aren’t shopping at the stores willingly; instead, they feel pressured to do so by the government.
About 50 percent of the sold vouchers were purchased by large private businesses and public institutions, according to the ministry’s data.
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“The government might think companies are voluntarily buying the vouchers, but that’s not true,” a senior executive at a conglomerate told the JoongAng Ilbo. “At a time of growing government pressures on large businesses, we have no choice but to comply with every piece of government policies in order to possibly avoid further restrictions.”
BY choi seon-wook and song su-hyun [ssh@joongang.co.kr]