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South Korea prepares to open door to foreign workers to cope with shortages

Companies have become increasingly reliant on overseas labour as native population shrinks

Ahmed Kawsar is hard at work, cutting plastic as it rolls off huge machines in a factory that produces packaging for food products in Icheon, about 60km south of Seoul.

The 32-year-old migrant worker, who was a schoolteacher in his native Bangladesh, earns about Won2.8mn ($1,900) a month including overtime, about 70 per cent of which he sends back home.

“You can’t earn this much money in Bangladesh,” he said.

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