Local governments nationwide are announcing policies to attract international talent and provide career support to students studying in the regions amid labor shortages.
Seoul will offer career consultations to 2,000 university students at its Job Match Seoul center, with international students offered consultations for the first time.
The annual Job Fair for International Students, hosted by the Korea Trade-Investment Promotion Agency (Kotra), will be held on August 27 and 28.
More international students means more young adults looking to map out a future in Korea for careers and beyond. To hear some of their experiences, the Korea JoongAng Daily sat down with three international students studying and living in Korea.
Foreign job seekers will be able to stay in Korea for an additional year with the D-10 visa, according to new policies announced by the Ministry of Economy and Finance Thursday.
To do so, working women with children in their 30s and older must continue their economic activities and stand up to fight unfair discrimination.
Over 100 international students looking to find a job in Korea attended K-campus's networking event on Friday at the JoongAng Ilbo building in Mapo District, western Seoul.
The company, hoping to hire more foreign talent, held the Global Team Hyundai Talk on Sunday in Seongsu-dong in eastern Seoul, meeting 100 international students from 40 countries.
LG CNS signed a memorandum of understanding with Korea University on Wednesday to establish the program, agreeing to open the program by the end of this year.
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