Young South Koreans call their country ‘hell’ and look for ways out
Young South Koreans call their country
‘hell’ and look for ways out
By Anna Fifield
Taken From: The Washington Post
Don’t be
fooled by the bright lights, the zingy K-pop music, the ubiquitous technology.
South Korea is, in the minds of many young people here, a living hell — and
they’re not going to take it anymore.
It’s a
place where, according to a growing number of 20- and 30-somethings, those born
with a “golden spoon” in their mouths get into the best universities and secure
the plum jobs, while those born with a “dirt spoon” work long hours in
low-paying jobs without benefits.
This Korea
even has a special name: “Hell Joseon,” a phrase that harks back to the
five-century-long Joseon dynasty in which Confucian hierarchies became
entrenched in Korea and when a feudal system determined who got ahead and who
didn’t.
“It’s hard
to imagine myself getting married and having kids. There is no answer or future
for us,” says Hwang Min-joo, a 26-year-old writer for television shows.
Hwang often
goes to work on a Monday morning with her suitcase, not leaving again until
Thursday night. She eats at her office, takes a shower at her office, sleeps in
bunk beds at her office. “If I finish work at 9 p.m., that’s a short day,” she
said.
Paychecks
come irregularly — or not at all, if the show gets axed — and because she
doesn’t have a contract, Hwang wonders when she goes to sleep each night
whether she’ll still have a job in the morning. She can make this life work
only by living at home with her parents — when she goes home, that is.
“If you
have enough money, South Korea is a great place to live. But if you don’t
. . .” she trails off.
Such
complaints are common among Hwang’s generation. Their parents lived through
South Korea’s astonishing economic rise during the 1960s and ’70s and then saw
democracy arrive in the ’80s. But those born after that period of rapid
improvement see only the downside: megalithic businesses that provide status
and good pay for their employees, with everyone else just muddling through.
Since the
2008 financial crisis, many people around the world have lost jobs, homes and
hopes. But in South Korea, such losses are felt especially acutely because of
the sharp contrast with the heady days of industrialization.
The economy
is sputtering — growth slowed to 2.6 percent last year — and its slide has been
accompanied by an increase in “irregular” jobs that offer no security and no
benefits, a trend felt keenly by those trying to get on the job ladder. Almost
two-thirds of the young people who got jobs last year became irregular workers,
according to Korea Labor Institute figures.
Even people
at the conglomerates are feeling the pinch, with big names such as Samsung,
Hyundai and Doosan laying off workers or calling for early retirement.
Amid the
gloom, more and more young Koreans are taking to social networks to complain
about their plight.
There’s a
Hell Joseon group on Facebook that boasts more than 5,000 members and a
dedicated “Hell Korea” website that posts graphic after graphic to illustrate
the awful state of life in South Korea: the long working hours, the high
suicide rate and even the high price of snacks.
Numerous
online forums offer advice on ways to escape. Some help South Koreans apply to
the U.S. military, a move that can offer a fast track to U.S. citizenship.
Others offer advice on training programs for aspiring welders, a skill that is
reportedly in demand in the United States and Canada.
And it’s
not just an Internet phenomenon. Novelist Jang Kang-myung’s “Because I Hate
South Korea” — a fictional work about a young woman who emigrated to Australia
— shot to the top of bestseller lists last year.
When writer
Son A-ram published a piece titled “The Declaration of a Ruined State” in the
Kyunghyang Shinmun newspaper, it quickly went viral.
“If my life
continues this way, I don’t really see much of a future,” says Lee Ga-hyeon, a
22-year-old who has taken time off her law studies to work at a union for
part-time workers. “In South Korea, ‘part time’ means working full-time hours
at the minimum wage.”
While she
was studying, Lee worked at McDonald’s and then at a bakery chain, often
working six hours a day, five days a week, in addition to studying full time.
The rent on her “shoe-box-size” room cost almost half her monthly earnings of $450.
“I want to
become a certified labor lawyer so that I can help others in similar
circumstances,” she said.
Not that
those with more stable jobs are much happier. In this working culture, 14-hour
days are the norm. In 2012, a left-leaning presidential candidate ran on the
slogan: “A life with evenings.”
Song, a
34-year-old whose wife had to quit her job when they had their daughter last
year, switched to a less-prestigious job because he was regularly working from
8 a.m. one day until 1 a.m. the next. “My boss always said, ‘The company comes
first; your family comes second.’ ” said Song, who asked to withhold his full
name for fear of getting into trouble at work.
Most
frustrating of all, many young people say, is that their parents, who worked
long hours to build the “Korean dream,” think the answer is just to put in more
effort.
“My parents
think I don’t try hard enough,” said Yeo Jung-hoon, 31, who used to work for an
environmental nongovernmental organization but now runs a Facebook group called
the “Union of Unskilled Workers.” “One time after a meeting, my boss said in
front of everyone, ‘I don’t think you’re suitable for this job.’ I felt
humiliated, but I couldn’t quit because I needed the money. It is a hell
without an exit.”



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