A comparative guide to disability employment quota systems in Japan and South Korea, covering levy and grant mechanisms, Special Subsidiary Companies, KEAD, and lessons for European employers.
Japan and South Korea: Disability Employment Quota Systems in Asia
Introduction
Japan and South Korea operate two of the most developed disability employment quota systems outside Europe. Both countries use a levy-grant mechanism — employers who fail to meet their quota pay a levy, and the funds are redistributed as grants to employers who exceed it. While structurally similar to European models like France and Germany, the Asian systems have distinctive features worth studying, particularly Japan's Special Subsidiary Company system and South Korea's comprehensive KEAD infrastructure.
Japan
The Quota System
Japan's Act on Employment Promotion of Persons with Disabilities establishes mandatory employment quotas for all employers above a threshold size.
Current quota rates (2024):
Sector
Quota Rate
Private sector
**2.5%** (raised from 2.3% in April 2024)
National and local government
**2.8%**
Prefectural boards of education and certain agencies
**2.7%**
The quota applies to employers with 40 or more employees (adjusted from 43.5 following the 2024 rate increase). The rate is scheduled to rise further to 2.7% by 2026.
Japan uses a weighting system for quota calculation:
Physically disabled persons with a disability certificate (shogaisha techo): count as 1.0 (severe disability: 2.0)
Intellectually disabled persons: count as 1.0 (severe: 2.0)
Mentally disabled persons (including psychiatric disabilities, added in 2018): count as 1.0 (with a transitional measure counting part-time mentally disabled workers as 1.0 rather than 0.5)
Short-time workers (20–30 hours/week) generally count as 0.5, with the exception noted above for mental disabilities.
The Levy and Grant System
Administered by the Japan Organization for Employment of the Elderly, Persons with Disabilities and Job Seekers (JEED), the levy-grant system works as follows:
Levy (for employers below the quota):
Employers with 100+ employees who fall short of the quota pay a monthly levy of JPY 50,000 (~$340 USD) per person below the required number.
Employers with 40–99 employees pay a reduced levy of JPY 40,000/month per shortfall (transitional measure).
Grants (for employers above the quota):
Employers with 100+ employees who exceed the quota receive a monthly grant of JPY 27,000 (~$180 USD) per person above the required number.
Employers with 40–99 employees receive JPY 21,000/month.
Grants for commuting support and workplace helpers
Special Subsidiary Companies (*Tokureiko*)
One of Japan's most distinctive features is the Special Subsidiary Company (tokubetsu kogaisha, commonly abbreviated as tokureiko). This is a subsidiary company established specifically to employ persons with disabilities, whose disabled employees are counted toward the parent company's quota.
Requirements for recognition as a Special Subsidiary:
At least 20% of employees must be persons with disabilities
At least 30% of disabled employees must have severe disabilities
The subsidiary must have its own management and operate as a genuine business entity
Facilities and equipment must be adapted to employees' needs
Scale: As of 2024, there are approximately 600 Special Subsidiary Companies in Japan, employing roughly 45,000 persons with disabilities. Major corporations including Panasonic, Sony, Toyota, and SoftBank operate Special Subsidiaries.
Advantages:
Allows concentrated investment in accessible facilities, trained supervisors, and adapted work processes
Provides a structured environment for workers who need more support than a mainstream workplace can offer
Counts toward the parent company's quota, providing a compliance pathway
Criticism:
Critics argue that Special Subsidiaries create segregated workplaces that reduce pressure on parent companies to make their main operations inclusive.
Some Special Subsidiaries have been criticised for offering limited career progression.
The system may inadvertently channel disabled workers away from mainstream employment.
Employment Support Centres
Japan operates a network of Local Vocational Centres for Persons with Disabilities (chiiki shokugyo senta) that provide:
Vocational assessment
Job preparation training
Workplace adaptation advice
Job coaching (dispatched job coaches who support the employee on-site)
Follow-up support after placement
Hello Work (public employment service) offices have dedicated disability employment counters staffed by specialised counsellors.
South Korea
The Quota System
South Korea's Act on the Employment Promotion and Vocational Rehabilitation of Persons with Disabilities establishes the following quotas:
Current quota rates (2024):
Sector
Quota Rate
Private sector (50+ employees)
**3.1%**
Public sector
**3.6%**
Public corporations
**3.8%**
South Korea's private-sector quota of 3.1% is notably higher than Japan's 2.5% and comparable to Germany's 5% (though Germany counts more broadly).
Disability Definition and Registration
South Korea uses a disability registration system administered by local governments. As of 2019, the system shifted from a medical-model grading system (previously Grades 1–6) to a severity-based binary classification: severe disability (jungjeung) and mild disability (gyeongjeung).
Administered by KEAD (Korea Employment Agency for Persons with Disabilities), the levy-grant mechanism mirrors Japan's:
Levy:
Employers with 50+ employees who fail to meet the 3.1% quota pay a monthly levy per unfilled position.
The levy amount is based on the minimum wage and varies by the degree of shortfall.
Base rate: approximately KRW 1,220,000/month (~$920 USD) per missing worker (2024).
Employers who employ zero disabled workers pay a penalty rate of 1.5x.
Grants and subsidies:
Employers who exceed the quota receive a monthly employment incentive: approximately KRW 300,000–800,000/month (~$225–$600 USD) per additional disabled employee, with higher amounts for severe disabilities.
Workplace modification grants
Assistive technology grants
Job coaching subsidies
KEAD: Korea Employment Agency for Persons with Disabilities
KEAD is the central agency responsible for disability employment policy implementation. Its services include:
For Employers:
Disability employment consulting
Workplace accessibility assessment
Financial support application processing
Disability awareness training
For Job Seekers:
Vocational assessment and counselling
Skills training programmes (including a network of vocational training centres)
Job placement services
Supported employment with job coaches
Assistive technology assessment and provision
Infrastructure:
KEAD operates vocational training centres across the country, offering courses in IT, manufacturing, services, and other sectors.
The Employment Development Institute (KEAD's research arm) produces data and policy analysis on disability employment.
KEAD manages the online job matching platform connecting disabled job seekers with employers.
Subsidised Employment and Social Enterprises
South Korea promotes social enterprises (sahoe jeok giup) as a pathway to disability employment. The Social Enterprise Promotion Act provides:
Certification for enterprises that employ disadvantaged groups
Financial support: labour cost subsidies, tax benefits, preferential procurement
Business development support
Standard Workplaces for Persons with Disabilities (jangaein pyojun saeopjang) are enterprises established specifically to employ disabled workers, similar to France's Entreprises Adaptees. They receive state subsidies and must employ a minimum percentage of disabled workers.
Comparison: Japan, South Korea, and European Systems
Feature
Japan
South Korea
Germany
France
**Quota rate (private)**
2.5%
3.1%
5%
6%
**Employer threshold**
40+ employees
50+ employees
20+ employees
20+ employees
**Levy per shortfall**
~$340/month
~$920/month
~$390/month
~$370–$555/month
**Dedicated subsidiary model**
Yes (Tokureiko)
Yes (Standard Workplaces)
Integration projects
Entreprises Adaptees
**Mental health included**
Since 2018
Yes (registered)
Yes
Yes (RQTH)
Key Observations
European quotas are higher, but Asian systems have been catching up. Japan has raised its quota three times since 2018.
The levy amount matters: South Korea's relatively high levy (~$920/month) creates stronger financial pressure than Japan's (~$340/month).
Subsidiary models are controversial everywhere: Japan's Tokureiko, South Korea's Standard Workplaces, and France's Entreprises Adaptees all face the same tension between providing supported employment and perpetuating segregation.
Mental health inclusion is recent: Japan only added psychiatric disabilities to the quota system in 2018, reflecting broader societal shifts in recognising mental health conditions as disabilities.
Lessons for International Employers
Companies operating across Asia and Europe should note:
Quota systems vary significantly in rate, threshold, and counting methodology. A multinational must track obligations separately in each jurisdiction.
Disability definitions differ: what qualifies as a registered disability in Japan may differ from South Korea, Germany, or France. Workers may need to obtain separate recognition in each country.
Subsidiary models are transferable: the Special Subsidiary Company concept may be adaptable for multinationals seeking a structured approach to disability employment in Asia-Pacific operations.
Compliance is just the floor: meeting the quota avoids levies but does not guarantee an inclusive workplace. Best practice requires going beyond numerical compliance to genuine inclusion.
Resources
Japan — JEED: [jeed.go.jp](https://www.jeed.go.jp)
Japan — Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare: [mhlw.go.jp](https://www.mhlw.go.jp)
South Korea — KEAD: [kead.or.kr](https://www.kead.or.kr)
South Korea — Ministry of Employment and Labor: [moel.go.kr](https://www.moel.go.kr)