Chinese restaurant ‘threatened’ by peers for free delivery
An owner of a Chinese restaurant in Incheon claimed to have been threatened by nearby restaurant owners, who took issue with its free delivery policy.
According to the owner, who made his claims on his restaurant's page at a mobile delivery application, he has been receiving calls from a group calling itself “Jungsik Yeonhap," which translates as Chinese Restaurants Association.
The owner said the group demanded that he abolish the free delivery policy and raise his prices, or they would bombard the restaurant with bad reviews to drive him out of business.
“I plan to fight them. It makes no sense (for restaurant owners) to fix prices when the economy is so bad. The free delivery policy stays as long as I stay in business,” the owner wrote.
The restaurant based in Gyeyang-gu, Incheon, was listed as using its own employees to make deliveries, instead of using delivery services. The owner's claim, and the existence of the supposed association, have not been verified as of now, but it was confirmed that the restaurant does not charge delivery fees.
It is among the highest-rated Chinese restaurants in the area on the Yogiyo app, perhaps buoyed by the flurry of top-rated customer reviews posted since the owner made his claim.
Delivery fees, typically around 3,000 won ($2.25), are relatively new to Korea, but have attracted increased complaints since becoming near-ubiquitous in the late 2010s.
Surveys indicate that the majority of South Koreans think delivery fees are too high.
A June survey by SK Communication's poll service Nate Q asked 11,140 adults across the country about what they thought would be a proper charge for food delivery. About 38 percent said none, followed by 35 percent who answered 1,000 won to 2,000 won, and 20 percent who said 2,000 to 3,000 won.
The survey results showed severe disparity from what the delivery workers thought were proper fees. Delivery workers for food delivery app Baemin recently held a strike demanding the base fee be raised from 3,000 won to 4,000 won.
In the aforementioned survey, only 3 percent of the respondents said they were happy to pay 3,000 to 4,000 won per delivery.
In addition to the delivery fee debate, South Korean consumers have also been battling the import of the tip culture. Giving tips had not been a commonly practiced custom in the past, but a rising number of local businesses have been requesting them in the past few years.
Some consumers are opting for take-out to avoid delivery fees, but even that can be subject to charges. A few weeks earlier, an unidentified Twitter user posted a photo of a kiosk screen requesting a take-out fee, sparking yet another bout of online criticism.
(责任编辑:패션)
[Herald Review] ‘Single in Seoul’ a bland rom
NewJeans, Ive win first national culture merit
EcoPro seeks big leap as global battery materials maker
Seoul shares hit 7
BTS gets 6th top honor at 2023 MAMA Awards
- Korean Air orders 20 Airbus A321neo aircraft
- [Photo News] Mt. Seorak welcomes first snow of the season
- Artifacts with inaccurate information removed from Korean exhibition in Germany
- 'Seventeenth Heaven' logs record
- Korea to showcase advanced climate technologies at COP28 Dubai
- BTS’ Jungkook features The Kid Laroi’s new single 'Too Much’
- Seoul shares open almost flat amid geopolitical tensions, rate woes
- Kangwon Land's wellness facilities offer quiet retreat
-
Music industry seeks solution to ticket scalping through public discussion
The Record Label Industry Association of Korea’s petition to revise the ticket scalping law submitte ...[详细]
-
Japan returns favor, flies Koreans out of Israel
Japan is evacuating 18 South Koreans from Israel using its military aircraft, a gesture of goodwill ...[详细]
-
[KH Explains] Tesla ditching its premium strategy?
Tesla, the world’s No. 1 electric vehicle manufacturer, is slashing car prices worldwide to further ...[详细]
-
Extended getbol, Busan wartime capital sites make UNESCO's tentative list
Additional Korean tidal flats in regions of South Jeolla Province and nine sites of the Busan wartim ...[详细]
-
Hillstate Gayang flats in Daejeon to go on sale
Some 350 flats at Hyundai Engineering & Construction's new apartment complex, Hillstate Gayang ...[详细]
-
STX issues new shares worth W80b to expand global business
South Korean trading company STX said Friday it had decided to initiate a paid-in capital increase o ...[详细]
-
[Herald Interview] Ian Bostridge enjoys incorporating great works of literature into music
The Hic Et Nunk music festival, which strives to focus on subtly changing trends in the classical mu ...[详细]
-
S. Korea's malaria cases reach highest level in 12 yrs
The number of malaria cases has been rising sharply in South Korea this year, reaching the highest l ...[详细]
-
Hanwha Ocean developing submarine stealth technology
Hanwha Ocean is leading a government research project on defense and security technology for buildin ...[详细]
-
EcoPro seeks big leap as global battery materials maker
South Korean battery materials manufacturer EcoPro, which celebrates its 25th anniversary this year, ...[详细]
- Hyundai Motor to build 1st car plant in Saudi Arabia, leading 46 Korea
- [Herald Interview] Saudi Arabia seeks to engage with world through Diriyah Contemporary Art Biennale
- 4 North Koreans cross maritime border, say want to defect
- AI Auction debuts tax consultant chatbot
- SK Signet delivers W5b ultrafast EV chargers to Revel
- Korea's yakgwa booming on back of ‘newtro’ trend, media coverage
- [Korean History] 'Yonsama' fans trailblaze Hallyu in Japan
- 22 busking stages set up at Han River parks
- FNC to debut new boy band Ampers&One on Nov. 15
- Business sentiment falls in S. Korea over Middle East tensions: poll
German envoy calls for enhanced security cooperation with S. Korea
[속보] 한국인 163명 이스라엘서 무사히 왔다…서울공항 도착
- Seoul shares close more than 1% higher on extended Israel
- [Herald Interview] Ian Bostridge enjoys incorporating great works of literature into music
- Hyundai Elevator wins Good Design Award 2023
- S. Korea's malaria cases reach highest level in 12 yrs
- 'Do not open plane doors' warning mandated for planes in flight
- [Herald Interview] Sustainability offers practical help to industries
- Exports up 4.6% during first 20 days of October