TITLE:
Hybrid Work, Institutional Barriers, and South Korea’s Productivity Gap: A Sociological Analysis
AUTHORS:
Ben Choi, Ridley Sendow, Tophy David
KEYWORDS:
Hybrid Work, Institutional Complementarities, South Korea, Labor Productivity, Bourdieu
JOURNAL NAME:
Sociology Mind,
Vol.16 No.3,
June
30,
2026
ABSTRACT: There is a striking sociological paradox that exists in South Korea, a country that is infamous for its demanding workplace culture. Here, the economy can be described as high-income with a world-class digital infrastructure that ranks last among 40 countries in hybrid working adoption (averaging just 0.5 remote days per week), yet the country already achieves productivity above what cross-national patterns would predict, given its lack of workplace flexibility. A comparison of data from 25 countries suggests that South Korea is an outlier, with actual productivity of $53 purchasing power parity (PPP) per hour, exceeding the Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) trend line prediction of $40.13 at 0.5 working from home (WFH) days per week (R2 = 0.54, N = 25). This paper argues that Korea’s position in this data set reflects an institutional lock-in where productivity is maintained through the exhaustion of embodied social capital rather than technological efficiency. Drawing on Bourdieu’s field theory, Hall and Soskice’s institutional complementarities, and Esping-Andersen’s care regime typology, we identify six interlocking barriers-Confucian hierarchy, ppalli-ppalli urgency, presenteeist evaluation, chaebol governance, the Gender Flexibility Trap, and extreme land constraints-that neutralize the gains of remote work. Additionally, this paper explores the MZ generation as a potential catalyst for field transformation. We argue that their resistance to traditional workplace norms represents a rejection of the current symbolic capital, which could shift South Korean corporate culture from loyalty-based physical presence to digital-native competency. This paper concludes that while the current system sustains a local equilibrium, South Korea is forgoing potential gains of $78 - $107 PPP/hr found in high flexibility economies. Realizing these gains requires a shift in the symbolic, institutional, and care-regime domains to support the emerging counter-culture views of the younger workforce.