Dwindling demand for foreign beers and whiskeys in South Korea has led some local liquor importers to let go of some of their staff, spurring concerns about whether mass layoffs may hit the country’s spirit industry.
According to the local alcoholic beverage industry on Monday, Heineken Korea, the Korean importer of Dutch multinational brewing company Heineken N.V.’s beers, has recently decided to lay off 3% to 4% of its total 160 employees this year.
“The company is reorganizing its business to improve competitivity to respond promptly to changes in liquor drinkers’ consumption patterns,” said an official of Heineken Korea.
The job cut comes after the Dutch beer has lost ground to Japanese rivals in Korea at a time when overall demand for imported beers has been on a downward spiral in the country in recent years, according to market analysts.
Heineken and other beers from the Netherlands had stayed as Koreans’ most loved foreign beer brands until 2021 but they were toppled by the triumphant return of Japanese brands driven by “Asahi Super Dry Nama Jokki Kan,” the hyped form-generating canned beer product, last year.
Heineken fell to the No. 3 foreign beer brand in Korea, trailing behind No. 1 Asahi and runner-up China’s Tsingtao in 2023.
Worse yet, Koreans’ appetite for exotic beers has also been steadily declining in recent years.
According to the Korea Customs Service, the country’s beer imports dropped to 228,747 tons in 2022 from 387,981 tons in 2018. Korea imported 238,695 tons of beer in 2023.
“Considering that the country’s beer imports hit a record low in 2022, last year’s rebound was not worthy of attention,” said an official in the Korean liquor industry.
Heineken Korea hiked the average selling price of its beers, including Heineken, by 11% last year to improve profitability but the industry expects the company would report worse earnings in 2023 than those of a year earlier.
In 2022, its operating profit decreased 27.7% on-year to 12.9 billion won ($9.7 million).
BK Co., the Korean importer of Tsingtao beers, already asked some of its employees to take voluntary early retirement in November last year.
BOOM AND BUST
The Korean whiskey market, which heavily relies on import brands, also shows signs of repeating the wine market’s boom-and-bust cycle.
The country’s No. 1 whiskey importer Diageo Korea is currently providing its employees with 10 and longer years of service early retirement offers. Employees are eligible for an early retirement package of severance pay, including eight to 36 months' worth of wages.
The company said its retirement program is voluntary and designed to help its staff find better jobs based on their interest and expertise.
But the industry sees Diageo’s staff reduction as part of its efforts to cope with the country’s declining whiskey demand and deteriorating profitability.
Korea’s whiskey imports, including Scotch whiskey, bourbon and rye, hit a record high of 30,586 tons in 2023.
But the country imported 2,031 tons of whiskey in January, down 27.4% from the same month a year earlier, suggesting that Koreans are losing appetite for brown liquor drinks after the whiskey craze swept the country during the COVID-19 pandemic-driven lockdowns.
“Considering that a liquor boom cycle is six to nine months in general, it is highly likely that (Koreans’) whiskey demand would soon wane from a peak after its fad has lasted for more than a year,” said an industry official.
After the latest boom has crowded the Korean whiskey market with many new liquor importers, the profitability of big spirits importers is also on the verge of deteriorating.
Some industry observers worry that the Korean whiskey market could follow suit of the local wine market that burst after a bubble during the pandemic.
Pernod Ricard Korea, the Korean operation of the French spirit and wine provider, and leading Korean whiskey producer Golden Blue, however, said they have no plan to restructure their operations and staff in the country for now.
Write to Hun-Hyoung Ha at hhh@hankyung.com
Sookyung Seo edited this article.
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