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Why young South Koreans call their country ‘hell’ and are looking for ways out

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A lone office worker is doing an overtime shift in downtown Seoul; young people in South Korea complain that life there is "hell." Photo: Jun Michael Park for The Washington Post
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.

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“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 Min-joo, 26, is a TV writer. Photo: Jun Michael Park for The Washington Post
Hwang Min-joo, 26, is a TV writer. Photo: Jun Michael Park for The Washington Post
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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.

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