Working women across the world continue to face wage inequality and a rollback in leadership representation—and the “motherhood penalty” makes their career success even harder. As employer demands force women in the U.S. out of the workforce, South Korean companies are stepping up to better the situation for female talent.

South Korean banks have rolled out several special perks to maintain women staffers. Last year, KB Kookmin Bank offered a “parental resignation” program where employees can take up to three years of unpaid child leave, and return to the job with the same rank and position from before—ensuring they don’t experience career setbacks from a long break. Financial group Woori offered its staffers a similar deal, with the cap set at two-and-a-half years. Other employers, like

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