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President-elect Yoon Seok-yeol met with the heads of six major economic groups yesterday (21st) and listened to the grievances of the business world.

President-elect Yoon promised to establish a hotline along with drastic regulatory reforms, starting a pro-business movement.



This is reporter Yoo Soo-hwan.



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At the lunch box luncheon meeting that lasted for over two and a half hours, business leaders demanded drastic regulatory reform with one voice from the elected Yoon Seok-yeol.



Controversy over the Serious Disaster Punishment Act, which has been in effect for two months from the start, continued.



[Hur Chang-soo/President of the Federation of Korean Industries: Safety is of course important, but I think that the Serious Accident Punishment Act, which treats businessmen as potential criminals, needs to be supplemented in line with global standards.



] emphasized that.



President-elect Yoon responded, "We will normalize the nonsensical parts step by step," and promised to establish a hotline, saying, "I will be able to call you directly at any time."



[Yoon Seok-yeol/President-elect: If there are factors that hinder businesses from freely operating, I think it is the most important thing for the government to do is to remove those things.]



One participant said that if President-elect Yoon calls public officials abusive, call immediately. He said that he would flexibly reconsider the 52-hour system.



President-elect Yoon will personally preside over the transition committee meetings every Tuesday and Thursday to select a new government task.



The transition committee will receive work reports from major ministries by the 25th and finalize the national task after two rounds of selection work.



President-elect Yoon directly announces the finalized national tasks before the inauguration ceremony.