South Korea is in a Hidden Crisis

South Korea is a technological wonderland, but the nation is hiding some pretty big crises.
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  • @sucukluevgto
    @sucukluevgto9 ай бұрын

    Props to Korea fitting 2 dystopias in a single peninsula

  • @YorktownUSA

    @YorktownUSA

    3 ай бұрын

    I know right? I think there's a hidden accomplishment for that in the games files. Or at least there should be.

  • @samxdy5563

    @samxdy5563

    3 ай бұрын

    It's very ironic the 2 most different countries in both economically and ideologically share the same name an border.

  • @azpont7275

    @azpont7275

    2 ай бұрын

    They are not so different at all. Both run on command economies, both consider their citizens serfs and both are still using a clan system. The only different is, that the North has one major clan, the south has like 5-10ish.

  • @bennyksmusicalworld968

    @bennyksmusicalworld968

    2 ай бұрын

    @@azpont7275 As a Korean, I don’t think clans matter that much… yes we recognise them but that has no bearing on anything in society

  • @azpont7275

    @azpont7275

    2 ай бұрын

    @@bennyksmusicalworld968 Or you are just waay to indoctrinated so see it. Would it change your thinking if I'd say big corps instead of clans? Bc the 5-10 big corps aka clans definitely has MASSIVE impact on Korean society.

  • @hawkeye5187
    @hawkeye51873 ай бұрын

    I am Korean, but there are many crises in Korea. The future is dark, but eating fried chicken disappears my worries and makes me so happy.

  • @arthas640

    @arthas640

    2 ай бұрын

    American dude: "someone finally gets it"

  • @jamesdulak3108

    @jamesdulak3108

    Ай бұрын

    Hell yeah brother

  • @der-Dritte

    @der-Dritte

    Ай бұрын

    Ah a true man of culture

  • @Triskelion345

    @Triskelion345

    Ай бұрын

    morbidly a beast

  • @Mochi-pk2vc

    @Mochi-pk2vc

    Ай бұрын

    With beer 🎉

  • @AlexVanChezlaw
    @AlexVanChezlaw Жыл бұрын

    Small fun fact: There's a city in Mexico called Pesqueria that has so many Korean migrants that the city has been nicknamed ''Peskorea''

  • @arthas640

    @arthas640

    2 ай бұрын

    I love that name

  • @stayingfitandfocused

    @stayingfitandfocused

    Ай бұрын

    also in brazil too

  • @mozziezapper

    @mozziezapper

    Ай бұрын

    don't care

  • @SieMiezekatze

    @SieMiezekatze

    Ай бұрын

    Que chistosos que son ustedes, aqui le llamaron soul

  • @ShitboxFlyer

    @ShitboxFlyer

    Ай бұрын

    @@mozziezapperYou do

  • @geese573
    @geese5739 ай бұрын

    As a gyopo it's almost scary to see third graders exiting extracurriculars at 9pm, and I barely see kids ages 13 to 16 on the streets, because they're all studying, thanks for shedding some light on this distopia.

  • @Steph-ty6lg

    @Steph-ty6lg

    3 ай бұрын

    I was forced to do this by white parents in the west but i was defo not the norm. Fell into severe depression. Now imagine a countey where all parents and institutions are like that to the kids, like my crazy mom side of family(dad's was nuts too but in different way). Absolutely logical that their youth is flying off high story buildings. Sorry for sounding insensitive but i was gonna suicide many times before j stopped myself. This type of stressful upbringing kills a child's drive for life young.

  • @Nitekom

    @Nitekom

    2 күн бұрын

    Almost?

  • @talglikman7276
    @talglikman7276 Жыл бұрын

    If 2.1 is considered to be the minimum birth rate required for a stable population than it's horrifying that south Korea's is below 1

  • @Eddies_Bra-att-ha-grejer

    @Eddies_Bra-att-ha-grejer

    Жыл бұрын

    They had a really high birth rate like just a generation ago as well, so the decline has been very steep.

  • @Polo-rn8ly

    @Polo-rn8ly

    Жыл бұрын

    Demographic decline isn't a bad thing. World population is too big. I support korea

  • @jamesdulak3108

    @jamesdulak3108

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Polo-rn8ly If it was evenly distributed throughout the world it's not a bad thing, but a country having too few people to provide for a large elderly population is blatantly a problem.

  • @Eddies_Bra-att-ha-grejer

    @Eddies_Bra-att-ha-grejer

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Polo-rn8ly No, of course not, South Korea is obviously overpopulated. But it's a problem if you have a social security system.

  • @MarcelinoDeseo

    @MarcelinoDeseo

    Жыл бұрын

    Unless SK allows immigration to offset the low birthrate . . .

  • @jimmyha1898
    @jimmyha1898 Жыл бұрын

    As someone who tutored kids in South Korea, I can confirm that that is indeed your typical 3rd grader rofllmao. The difficulty of their high school math exams is beyond godlike. Me as a kid would have failed out in 5th grade if I was a student there. It's probably much harder to get into Seoul National University as a student in the Korean system than it is for us to get into top end Ivy League schools. It's so ridiculously hyper competitive.

  • @amduser86

    @amduser86

    Жыл бұрын

    Math is not that hard in school, even in Korea. What they teach is not so different to what i had to do in germany.

  • @anggasurbakti8269

    @anggasurbakti8269

    Жыл бұрын

    And those kids will then become slave for the chaebols

  • @Aru_im

    @Aru_im

    Жыл бұрын

    Their education system is directed for working for the Chaebols

  • @pepehimovic3135

    @pepehimovic3135

    Жыл бұрын

    The math part is overhyped. I imagine Singaporean high schools have the hardest tests on average (whatever that means lol) but it’s all in the range of understandable. Saying godlike etc is bs it’s public high schools not math Olympiad. You are just cIapped at math my friend.

  • @hunkydori

    @hunkydori

    Жыл бұрын

    People in the comments have never experienced Korean education smfh

  • @yong1626
    @yong16269 ай бұрын

    Currently, Korea is experiencing the biggest problem with the extreme congestion of the capital(Seoul). However, because there are no jobs, no young people want to go to other areas, and companies are headquartered only in Seoul, and no one wants to go to other areas. As a result, house prices in Seoul are rising and competition for jobs is getting fiercer. Who would want to have a baby in such an intensely competitive atmosphere? Universities: 'All' competitive universities are located in Seoul. Korea has risen because of Seoul, but Korea is falling apart because of Seoul. The wage gap between large companies and small and medium-sized companies is so large that the social atmosphere is encouraged for those working for small and medium-sized companies to feel inferior for life. And only 10% of people enter large companies.

  • @siddeshnaik2296

    @siddeshnaik2296

    3 ай бұрын

    US is not interested in Korea anymore it is not important for them geopolitically that is why u r facing this crisis, US controls the worlds finance earlier it was very important because communism capitalism fighting Russia China now not so more. US has managed to engineer the gender divide using media and do Christian conversion which will ensure the country cannot be rallied using single ideology or objective as it now has controls over certain factions this will ensure even in future SK is not a threat. No country in recent history has become rich without the US needing them to be rich be it Japan, Germany, Taiwan.

  • @wildfire9280

    @wildfire9280

    3 ай бұрын

    Land value tax would fix this.

  • @Steph-ty6lg

    @Steph-ty6lg

    3 ай бұрын

    Korea is 1000x worse but i see that in my home country of Bulgaria. Sofia the capital for a wage, comparable to the west and still times lower. But Sofia is the closest to bare minimum. Rest of country is a sinking ship. But no infrastructure and opportunities to keep the kids in shitty areas and they move out logically. And housing prices are like quarter million us dollars for a building built during communism.

  • @Steph-ty6lg

    @Steph-ty6lg

    3 ай бұрын

    And yes only the richest in Sofia live like a comfy german. 90% dont know if they, their kids or old parents will die by shit hospital, horrible car culture, no law so chance your killer might be safe if he is the right person. So 90% are manipulated to hate the 5% and are miserable. And institutions want it that way.

  • @Steph-ty6lg

    @Steph-ty6lg

    3 ай бұрын

    When i said 1000x worse i mean we are too poor for late stage capitalism no offence to korea they are more developed than my country in east europe my english is just shit so i sound rude when i dont mean to be.

  • @anandsuralkar2947
    @anandsuralkar2947Ай бұрын

    fertility rate 0.8? naah those are rookie numbers. south korea today fertility rate 0.68.

  • @VitutNekruista

    @VitutNekruista

    2 күн бұрын

    2025 -2

  • @matthewchi5292
    @matthewchi5292 Жыл бұрын

    Sad to hear there seems to be no solution to solving this. My own mom, who is the most positive and hard working person I know, admitted that the economic inequality situation is terrible and it's hard for her own business to go anywhere

  • @bowwak5366

    @bowwak5366

    Жыл бұрын

    Bet it's mostly about taxes, they cause inequality.

  • @confusedasian2212

    @confusedasian2212

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bowwak5366 Oh yea taxes, it can't be any more nuanced than that.

  • @otaviobettega2492

    @otaviobettega2492

    Жыл бұрын

    Solution is encouraging immigration from lower income south east asian countries, and labour reforms... Surely there will be no devastating social and cultural consequences right??? Surely asian cultures are very inclusive and not racist guys!! :D

  • @cjplays7727

    @cjplays7727

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bowwak5366 taxes totally, definitely not one of the only reliable ways to fight economic inequality

  • @user-vo9wd6tx6c

    @user-vo9wd6tx6c

    Жыл бұрын

    @@otaviobettega2492 the problem is nearly all of Asia has low birth rates. IIRC Indonesia's birthrate is barely above replacement, India's is at replacement, and Iran's is well below replacement.

  • @bandoin_
    @bandoin_ Жыл бұрын

    Never have known that a foreigner would know and explain about South Korea better than I could ever have.

  • @rykehuss3435

    @rykehuss3435

    Жыл бұрын

    The resources are out there to learn from. Unless you do the research, you wont know about these issues at this depth or know how to explain them properly. No matter where you are born or living

  • @user-dt7uq1qw7t

    @user-dt7uq1qw7t

    Жыл бұрын

    But there is hope Since Korea has excellent human resources as a result of hardening education, it is now necessary to pursue the active use of talent in the right place and in the right place. In addition, the elderly poverty and the suicide rate of the elderly should be carefully approached as policy works It is ironic that the elderly employment rate is the number one in the OECD and the elderly poverty rate is also the number one. And what are Korea's advantages for Korea to develop further? Know this accurately and improve the disadvantages while maximizing the advantages. There are side effects of compressed growth, but as Korea has grown rapidly, citizens' consciousness and political system have developed to some extent The following data may be helpful in training Korea. The best rankings should be maximized and supplemented. According to the British Economist's democracy index, Korea is ranked 16th out of 167 countries surveyed by 2021, higher than Japan, Austria, the United States and France. Next, the Public Integrity Index, which objectively measures corruption in a society, shows that Korea is higher than Japan and Belgium among 117 countries surveyed (out of 200 countries), 18 mandates similar to Luxembourg and Costa Rica The data is published annually by the European Centre for Anti-Corruption Capabilities. As of 2022, Korea is ranked 43rd out of 180 countries surveyed. It is similar to the 42nd ranked US, 58th ranked Japan, 72nd ranked Italy and Israel. Last year, it was higher than Taiwan and the United States. However, the ranking of media credibility is close to the bottom of major countries with the US and France According to the data evaluating the competitiveness of the cultural field, Korea ranked second in the world in the soft power ranking announced by Monocle of Germany And in the data released by the UK agency, 19th place between Balgie and Ireland! The country's credit rating is third in the world (higher than the US and UK), and the innovation index, which assesses how innovative a country is, is announced separately by the European Union and Bloomberg Communications. R & D spending is the No. 1 OECD and e-government competitiveness is the No. 1 OECD Next, let's look at how mature the society is (including civic consciousness) and how the quality of life is measured. According to the Social Development Index, which shows how advanced society is, Korea is higher than the US, Singapore, Italy, UK and Israel by 2021, and 16th place similar to Belgium and Luxembourg In detail, it ranked 5th in personal safety, 5th in health and welfare, 1st in information and communication accessibility, and 1st in higher education accessibility among 200 countries. It is ranked 19th in nutrition and medical support, 26th in water and sanitation facilities, 25th in individual rights, 30th in individual freedom and choice, 32nd in residential environment, and 26th in basic knowledge accessibility. These are also high, but it is a little ambiguous to say good? The environment is 80 delegates due to the neighboring country (details are brought as of 2020) According to the Human Development Index, which assesses the development level of the people based on average life expectancy, education level, per capita income, etc., Korea was higher than Luxembourg in Europe in 2020 and 19th in the last year Britain was ranked 18th and Austria, the US, Spain, Italy and France were ranked lower than South Korea This data is published annually by the United Nations Organization. There is a separate ranking of human development indexes that reflect inequality. Based on this data, Korea ranked 21st higher than other developed countries such as France, USA, Singapore, Hong Kong and Israel In the 2021 World's Best Country Rankings released by US News, Korea ranked 15th among Norway, Denmark, Italy and Finland among 200 countries In detail, it ranked 18th in quality of life, 8th in dynamism, 6th in innovation, 7th in cultural influence, 5th in entrepreneurship In terms of quality of life, public education development is 74, economic stability is 85, job quality is 64, public health system is 55.7 However, family stability and price stability are low, and animal rights are only 18 out of 100 points. In addition, in the OECD Better Life Index, Korea is ranked 28th overall in 2020 (out of 37 countries). In detail, it is ranked 5th in housing quality and accessibility, 2nd in citizen participation, 11th in education and technology, 17th in quality and availability, and 14th in social equality Income is 22nd and safety is 24th, which is normal (recently rising to 11th) In the questionnaire survey on health, which is a subjective item here, the response is very negative, so the overall ranking is not high The Vulnerable Country Index, which shows how stable a country is in many areas, shows that Korea is in a very stable group with France and Belgium, and is higher than the stable group with the United States and Britain This data shows that the criteria for calculation are power struggle, social division, illegal election, minority suppression, recession, manpower outflow, development imbalance, education, public transportation, security, infrastructure, health, religious freedom and civil liberties, Other human rights, establishment and practice of the rule of law, population stability, national credit rating, etc. Finally, let's look at materials that are difficult to categorize as specific items. According to the Economic Freedom Index, which measures how economic freedom and legal stability are guaranteed, Korea ranked 27th among 177 countries between Sweden, Norway and Malaysia in 2016 It is currently ranked 25th, higher than Japan, which ranked 30th, and France, which ranked 64th.

  • @jbkim2541

    @jbkim2541

    Жыл бұрын

    ㅎㅇ

  • @Xilladan093

    @Xilladan093

    Жыл бұрын

    Racist CIown. Arrogant. Foreigner is disparaging.

  • @twietter

    @twietter

    Жыл бұрын

    @RisingSunCountry 6:20 why do asian countries used to have clans and not tribes

  • @sasankakuruppuarachchi6509
    @sasankakuruppuarachchi65099 ай бұрын

    I've been in Korea for 2 years now. I've always felt this underlying stress everywhare that is growing like a ticking bomb. Everyone feels it. but choose to ignore. I decided to leave Korea on the second day I slept in. It didn't get any better with the time. No expat I know feels like home here. Finally I graduated and I'm moving to Finland. I have got nothing against Korean people but I guess it's the system that is cooking everyone alive like a pressure cooker.

  • @elmoisamac

    @elmoisamac

    6 ай бұрын

    I lived there for 10 years. Pressure cooker is the correct term for sure.

  • @tour-de-tour

    @tour-de-tour

    6 ай бұрын

    Haha we love the pressure cooker and steamed sticky stuff! So we steam ourselves ❤ embrace peninsula mentality

  • @User_Noproblem

    @User_Noproblem

    6 ай бұрын

    한국인도 힘든데 외국인은 얼마나 더 힘들었을까요,, 미안해요 ❤ 한국이라는 나라 시스템은 못 되먹었다.. ㅠㅠ

  • @BBB-kb1op

    @BBB-kb1op

    6 ай бұрын

    그럼에도 적응하고 살아가는 외국인들도 많죠. 과도한 경쟁과 빨리 돌아가는 한국사회가 힘들긴 하지만 그래서 가장 가난한 나라에서 급성장할 수 있었습니다. 한국에서 당신같이 말하면 패배자, 게으름뱅이, 부적응자라고 손가락질 받겠죠. 자신에게 맞는 곳에 가서 살면됩니다

  • @sasankakuruppuarachchi6509

    @sasankakuruppuarachchi6509

    6 ай бұрын

    @@BBB-kb1op I have already moved to Finland. Yes as you said Korea is not for me. I am Happier, healthier, more social and more productive now than I was in Korea.

  • @mbag012
    @mbag012 Жыл бұрын

    I lived in Korea for 5 years as a Korean who grew up in the west. It's absolutely brutal there. I left because I saw no hope for my future if I kept living there. There is no respite. Only brutal competition every single day of your life, struggling to get ahead of your competition who are also working their ass off for the exact same goals that you are. Kids? You'll be living under the poverty line if you have too many, and because of the unstable employment due to the economy being dependant on exports, it's just... So hard to even think of having kids. I feel terribly guilty for having left, if I could contribute to Korea I would but how can I make a difference when all the decisions are made by people who are so high up in their ivory tower they can't even see me? I just have a heavy heart:(

  • @BlinkShadow

    @BlinkShadow

    Жыл бұрын

    How could you make a difference? VOTE HARDER lol, thats what your white colonial master tells you, democracy is the way lol 🤡🤡🤡

  • @Strikingeight
    @Strikingeight Жыл бұрын

    You forgot to mention that South Korea has a elderly homeless crisis as well as they don’t really have social security. So in conjunction with the current economic woes of the youths, S. Korea is going to become a nation of homeless old people.

  • @dotdotdotdotdotdotdottod

    @dotdotdotdotdotdotdottod

    Жыл бұрын

    what sucks about aouth korea as well is our education system. now i HATE it when peoplw bring up satistics as if that means shit, like cool were all edcuated but what are we educated is far diffrent then how many peple have education. we are basically groomed our entire lives to serve these chaebwols and so everyone has and will fight for the same god damn job of who gets to lick the boots of one of these companys and it just leaves no room for any value in work or lide in general. eveeything is crafyed from basically all these monoplys that are litterly running the country

  • @sagemack7679

    @sagemack7679

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dotdotdotdotdotdotdottod that sounds AWFUL! How do you cope with such a system?

  • @Strikingeight

    @Strikingeight

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dotdotdotdotdotdotdottod and if you don’t secure a job with one, you will be working some back alley job that will only cover your basic needs for your entire life until you physically cannot work anymore and then wind up homeless. Women won’t date you if you don’t have one of these jobs Your parents will disown you if you choose anything that becomes a burden for them/ they didn’t choose for you And its worse for men because at least women have the option of whoring themselves out at a Juicy Bar to some soldier/ rich fuck in Gangnam, where they may get lucky and marry the simp. The only lottery system like that that exists for men is in Squid Game.

  • @AndresRamirez-fi5uw

    @AndresRamirez-fi5uw

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dotdotdotdotdotdotdottod wont that lead to more emigration from Korea? No well paying jobs? Time to go. Korean diaspora will definitely grow in the coming years.

  • @iandavidvillaloboswong5180

    @iandavidvillaloboswong5180

    Жыл бұрын

    Social security is a secondary issue, the problem is with those elderly not having a family to take care of them. Its the family's job not the government's

  • @pola3911
    @pola3911 Жыл бұрын

    As a 25-year-old Korean, this video is quite accurate. KZread, numerous dramas and movies show Korean fantasies, but the reality is different. The conflict between men and women has reached its peak, and the older generation promotes generational conflict by giving them the nickname of the "MZ generation" that we don't even want. Not a few young Koreans, including myself, are pessimistic about their lives and have little excitement. So we're only looking for stimulation and we want to forget about the dark future. "Miracles on the Han River" is also a thing of the past. The older generation is destroying what our ancestors have created by greed, and we are ruining it by giving up. In every way, Korea is definitely in crisis. Thank you for making such a detailed video.

  • @agarlicsorbet6482

    @agarlicsorbet6482

    Жыл бұрын

    ㄹㅇ 사장네들 노인네들ㅋ 젊은 사람들 요즘은 힘든 일 안한다고 뻔질나게 가스라이팅 치다가 정작 자기들 밑에 들어오는 젊은사람들은 개돼지 취급하고 다치면 ㅃㅇㅗ 진짜 힘든 일 하면서 중소기업마냥 잘 버는 젊은 사람들은 절대로 여기 포함 안시킴ㅋ 왜냐면 이ㅅ끼들은 몸이 부서질 때까지 부려먹을 만큼 부려먹고 성질나면 욕받이로 써먹고 외노자처럼 최저시급은 주고 싶지만 또 필요할 때는 자기한테는 없는 예의바르고 말 잘듣고 고분고분하고 말끝마다 맞습니다 해주는 아들딸 손주가 되어주고 술친구도 해주고 또 583651가지 한국인 특 잡무도 척척 처리해줄 노예들을 원하기 때문

  • @jeremybeau8334

    @jeremybeau8334

    Жыл бұрын

    Why are corean so racist and xenophobic? i mean, if they didn’t wanted to have foreigners they shouldn’t have made so many marchendising about themselves to export around the world.

  • @Fishboi64

    @Fishboi64

    Жыл бұрын

    The Men and Women 'conflict' makes North Korea look sane and rational

  • @jeremybeau8334

    @jeremybeau8334

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Fishboi64 The more i know about South Korea, the more i think that North Koreans (the people) aren't that bad as a society. Sure, they have authoritarian leaders and sufer the USA sanction, but as a society they seam just normal people. The obsession of south koreans with material possesion, "succes" even if its fake, sexism, racism, xenophobia, violence as well as their obsession to be white is just scary and quite disgusting.

  • @robertquentin6755

    @robertquentin6755

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes , feminism is totally a piece of trash !😂

  • @zelda_the_queen2096
    @zelda_the_queen20963 ай бұрын

    When I visited South Korea recently, many of the shops and restaurants were run by the elderly. I watched one video where they were saying that due to the cost of living and skewed age distribution, as well as the low birth rate, many elderly must work well past retirement age to stay alive. It’s so sad. Even when you are older and tired, there is no rest.

  • @rohirrim9821
    @rohirrim98214 ай бұрын

    Bruh this is literal cyberpunk dystopia

  • @yhc687
    @yhc687 Жыл бұрын

    One funny thing is that Chaebols, the large conglomerates, are actually the ones that follow the labor laws, provide tons of benefits for its workers and have better work life balance because they are filthy rich and can afford to provide those to their workers. It's actually the small, medium sized companies that work with Chaebols who have it the worst. They are not part of those conglomerates so they not only get paid worse, but they have to work overtime to meet the deadline the conglomerates have set for them, leading their workers to work till death

  • @genghiskhan5701

    @genghiskhan5701

    10 ай бұрын

    People forget that running and especially working for a startup, especially when its run by people who do not know what they are doing, is hell

  • @roc7880

    @roc7880

    8 ай бұрын

    true, not so many people are aware of this aspect.

  • @M7ner08

    @M7ner08

    2 ай бұрын

    This makes more sense now

  • @marcco954
    @marcco954 Жыл бұрын

    As Korean, I'm very surprised you have researched really well about S.Korea. Young ppl like me still wants to live in Seoul since it is very difficult to find a job elsewhere (Of course there are works to do in other places but the salary isn't that good). So, the price of real estate is sky rocketing in Seoul which makes difficult for young ppl to get a proper place to live. Due to such problem, more and more youngsters give up getting married or even if they get married, they rather choose not to have a child because having a child costs a lot either.

  • @lonnybloo

    @lonnybloo

    Жыл бұрын

    do you recommend going to Korea for studies? i'm from Russia and education system here is terrible, especially in the field I want to study but it's somewhat developed in Korea and scholarship program by Korean government has good terms

  • @Abhaayyyy

    @Abhaayyyy

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lonnybloo after some months I was also planning to go to Korea for studies but after this I don't know if I should .... The Korean education is very hard I guess I don't wanna study 24 hrs

  • @user-nt4rr6vt8c

    @user-nt4rr6vt8c

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lonnybloo which field are you in? is it for ph.D?

  • @user-nt4rr6vt8c

    @user-nt4rr6vt8c

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Abhaayyyy well it isnt. only for the highschool education not uni,,

  • @lonnybloo

    @lonnybloo

    Жыл бұрын

    @@user-nt4rr6vt8c Film and Animation I graduated from school and then college (animation major), want to take undergraduate studies

  • @user-mp6gf9yo2g
    @user-mp6gf9yo2g3 ай бұрын

    Korea is over. The birth rate is now around 0.6, but it's only the beginning. Currently, there are 0.38 in some districts of Seoul and 0.31 in Busan. Korea is just a country that is over and quickly appears and disappears.

  • @arthas640

    @arthas640

    2 ай бұрын

    They should import some Latinos. Cheap labor, plenty of people for their Squid Games, and bring those birth rates up.

  • @lIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIllII

    @lIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIllII

    2 ай бұрын

    Koreas history is deep and long

  • @jackMeought-fr8vl

    @jackMeought-fr8vl

    2 ай бұрын

    The north will take over in a few decades it seems

  • @prosoccer926

    @prosoccer926

    Ай бұрын

    @@lIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIlIllII doesnt matter korean average is 10cm

  • @TerridaX

    @TerridaX

    Ай бұрын

    @@prosoccer926 mroe like 3 inches

  • @HazakunaJr
    @HazakunaJr3 ай бұрын

    The reason S. Korea imports so much oil is not for its own consumption, but because there are many world-class oil refining and chemical companies in South Korea. They import crude oil, process it and export it again. Of course, the Korean Peninsula is a very barren land where not even 1 mL of oil is produced, so oil must be imported for survival.

  • @AruRomulo

    @AruRomulo

    10 күн бұрын

    Cry

  • @yiannchrst
    @yiannchrst Жыл бұрын

    What I love the most about your videos is the positivity you have!

  • @Ttegegg

    @Ttegegg

    Жыл бұрын

    And that swear word. Sounded like his voice cracked somehow

  • @stefanschleps8758

    @stefanschleps8758

    Жыл бұрын

    I know what you mean. When Apophis is due to strike us, or Yellowstone is about to go up. We want him telling us the news.

  • @Halcon_Sierreno

    @Halcon_Sierreno

    Жыл бұрын

    I love the animals he uses to represent countries.

  • @yiannchrst

    @yiannchrst

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Halcon_Sierreno Yes! I love them so much too!

  • @Halcon_Sierreno

    @Halcon_Sierreno

    Жыл бұрын

    @@yiannchrst Pegasus for North Korea, lol.

  • @hijisfriend9030
    @hijisfriend9030 Жыл бұрын

    The problem with SK is something I called "new economic power syndrome." When you grows up too fast and having a reliable allies but most/all of them aren't from your region. Countries like SK, UAE, Qatar fell for this condition. The mentalities when they were developing countries are there while having developed economy. It boost their ego and basically raised systemic discrimination in their countries either racism towards different developing country or generation gap mindset between young Gen and elder of the country.

  • @Serching4JerryGarcia

    @Serching4JerryGarcia

    Жыл бұрын

    Could China be considered part of this category too?

  • @hijisfriend9030

    @hijisfriend9030

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Serching4JerryGarcia yes, they were. Although, They're changing. Idk, how their current young generation looks like in the future.

  • @faiq026

    @faiq026

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Serching4JerryGarcia china have better treatment for developing countries through their belt and road initiative, despite massive debt trap propaganda from western countries more and more developing countries, especially on africa are joining in to the project. China wants to make as many allies as possible because they already have many geopolitical rivals

  • @Serching4JerryGarcia

    @Serching4JerryGarcia

    Жыл бұрын

    @@faiq026 the truth is that the Belt and Road Initiative hasn't been working out like they thought it would. Alot of countries who got involved are experiencing buyer's remorse. The people of those nations are not happy that their governments leaders are using the opportunity to do shady underhanded deals while China just looks away. Then there's the fact of indigenous groups who are negatively effected by the construction and development as well.

  • @SuperCrow02

    @SuperCrow02

    Жыл бұрын

    It's not at all comparable to petrol states like the Gulf States or any states basing their economies solely off of natural resources, its economy is actually a legitimate one and you're making a false equivalence. Demographic collapse is a problem that will be plaguing most of the world in the near future and we still aren't certain of what its effects will be. For all we know it could be reversed relatively quickly, it's stupid to look at a chart that's attempting to predict the future and take it as fact.

  • @WineoBeelzebub
    @WineoBeelzebub Жыл бұрын

    North Korea actually allowed several kpop acts to perform in the country as recently as 2018.

  • @GayFrogsTho

    @GayFrogsTho

    2 ай бұрын

    Yeah for high ranking party officials no doubt. Hard to imagine crowds of malnourished coal miners and farm labourers packing North Korean stadiums to watch a boy band.

  • @Matheus-hj8ye
    @Matheus-hj8ye6 ай бұрын

    Geopolitics has been a hobby of mine for some time and your way of explaining things is by far the best I've seen on youtube. Freaking hilarious and accurate. Subbed

  • @lamina11

    @lamina11

    27 күн бұрын

    Same. I have a KZread degree in Geopolitics. History repeats itself all the time!

  • @TheHaniverse
    @TheHaniverse Жыл бұрын

    As a Brit in my late twenties trying to build a life here, I can not stress how accurate this video is. The decreasing aging population due to the wealth divide is also the most palatable - most of my friends have completely given up on the prospect of having children or getting married because we literally don't even have time to exist. I work 10 - 7pm, but in reality I get up at 8 and I get home at 8, by which time I'm already exhausted, so my evenings are spent doing next to nothing. (And I know 8am is a late start to some but I have chronic insomnia so it's usually 4 hours of sleep for me, which just adds to how utterly exhausted I am when I get home.) Even if you aren't exhausted when you get home, realistically your finances limit what you can even do in the evening. If you live at home, then you likely sign up for gym or a hobby-related club activity, but you'll be nagged about why you aren't saving to afford the exorbitantly high housing costs so you can move out and get married. If you do happen to live alone, a good chunk of your wages (about 50% for me personally) will go on rent alone, then there's living expenses, savings, if you want to take any classes so you can get a job that pays you a few extra bucks a day but ultimately makes no difference to your living situation. I love Korea and I am grateful for the life I've built for myself here, the people are kind and culture is beautiful, but there are a LOT of economic problems. Teens, 20s and 30s are all giving up on 'enjoying life' or planning for bleak futures and are living more in the moment because they don't believe that hard work alone will get you anywhere. You'll also see that's why Korean has the largest national % of KZreadrs with over 1 mil subs - many are realizing that the only way to break out of this system is to earn internationally and work for themselves using opportunities like KZread where they can see that enough hard work pays off. I myself am planning to transition to fully freelance next year and try to diversify my income streams because even being highly qualified, I can not find a job with decent pay, and I have even more factors working against me as a non-Korean.

  • @daebak7370

    @daebak7370

    Жыл бұрын

    World govts are colluding together at the expense of their own citizens to usher in new world order aka antichrist beast system. Cash will be obsolete. One world digital currency is coming soon.

  • @AndalusianLuis

    @AndalusianLuis

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol why are you still even there. If I was in your shoes I would’ve moved back to my country first chance I got.

  • @mrobocop1666

    @mrobocop1666

    Жыл бұрын

    @@AndalusianLuis Or just work remotely getting salary there or at home and living in cheaper country

  • @belldrop7365

    @belldrop7365

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mrobocop1666 And get less money? Nah man, it's the point of capitalism. Complain all they want but as long as they reap it's benefits, aka money, they'll keep sowing more of it.

  • @lumpsoboii4201

    @lumpsoboii4201

    Жыл бұрын

    @@AndalusianLuis lol my first thought too when I read this.

  • @rimostle
    @rimostle Жыл бұрын

    4:31, wow I honestly can't believe he still got a sponsorship deal after saying that lmao. Props to hoser for that audacity.

  • @MarcelinoDeseo

    @MarcelinoDeseo

    Жыл бұрын

    "Except Wondrium" as his disclaimer. You never gonna bite the hands that feed you. 😉

  • @rimostle

    @rimostle

    Жыл бұрын

    @Marcelino Deseo lol thx for pointing that out I didn't notice it.

  • @FluffDough

    @FluffDough

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MarcelinoDeseo what a good point

  • @jihukim4000
    @jihukim40006 ай бұрын

    Haha i’m korean this video is so accurate, by the way the birth rates even lower now (0.7) and 0.5 for seoul which is just so horrible. Im an highschooler and the pressure we get is like probably unimaginable for the rest of the world, if you heard how late at night we go to bed you’d be surprised.

  • @haplol7267

    @haplol7267

    6 ай бұрын

    then why being so eager to succeed

  • @user-iz1vw7zq1l

    @user-iz1vw7zq1l

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@haplol7267We are not seeking success. We need to study 15 hours a day to get a good grade and go to a good university through the CSAT. Nevertheless, an average of 75 percent of them are employed by small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). However, with the average house price of 1 billion won in Korea, young people with an average annual salary of 30 million won have to work for about 30 years. This is why they have to study harder than 15 hours to get a better job at a conglomerate. We have neither tourism nor natural resources like Europe nor natural resources like Saudi Arabia and Russia. This does not mean that we will not slow down growth through human resources, as long as we do not grow like Central Asia, because we may be invaded again by China or Japan.

  • @user-cf5tn1bl5p

    @user-cf5tn1bl5p

    6 ай бұрын

    그냥 포기해라 나처럼

  • @auraguard0212
    @auraguard0212 Жыл бұрын

    I guess Chaebols are why Korean anime games always have corporate-run dystopias, if they're not some period piece...

  • @KyleAdler
    @KyleAdler Жыл бұрын

    Riddle me this batman: what makes 80% of the products despite having only 10% of the jobs

  • @Bangla_warrior

    @Bangla_warrior

    Жыл бұрын

    Damn you riddler

  • @a.ricole4081
    @a.ricole4081 Жыл бұрын

    Yay a Korean video finally. Thank you for reminding me how screwed my nation is.

  • @eatinsomtin9984

    @eatinsomtin9984

    Жыл бұрын

    wont be any of you left in 80 years.

  • @ammarahmed4532

    @ammarahmed4532

    Жыл бұрын

    Not quite, it's a lot more complicated than that. There a little something called productivity growth(which is the main thing to counteract aging population) which as it so happens korea has one of the highest rates of in any developed country + potential for even more. This definitely won't completely solve the crisis but it will be more than enough to maintain good living conditions and ok economic growth. As for dependency ratio, the national pension isn't estimated to run out until 2070. The reason for this is that it is currently running on excess and has been for a long time cuz not that many people are using it as of now(ofc the downside of this is the massive elderly poverty rate). Plus the current rate of tax contribution toward it is way below average and if the government decides to increase it by even 5%(which is still cheaper than most other developed nations), it won't ever run out.

  • @Xilladan093

    @Xilladan093

    Жыл бұрын

    @@eatinsomtin9984 quiet u cIown. Racist

  • @garden3818

    @garden3818

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@eatinsomtin9984 I disagree. As population shrinks, wages will go up again, and with increased space in the cities people will have kids again. The issue is making sure the country survives whilst the population shrinks, which will be easier said than done. But just because demographics is one way today it won't mean it'll be like this forever. People in the 1900s were saying the Earth was going to overpopulate, and they were obviously wrong.

  • @eatinsomtin9984

    @eatinsomtin9984

    Жыл бұрын

    @@garden3818 no proof of people having more kids when there are less people in a city. Space is not the primarily problem, it’s mostly about their values, religion and economy. Also, wages will not go up and their is no proof of that, if young people are having to pay a lot pre for the old and their not enough people to be working jobs, then how exactly does that increase wages?

  • @jacobyoung6876
    @jacobyoung687610 ай бұрын

    Shocked to see I hadn't subscribed yet (saying this as I'm subscribing). Man, your content is so good. I love your sense of humor and the way you present geopolitics in a joking, but highly informative way is just gold.

  • @bleargh22
    @bleargh22 Жыл бұрын

    Ok I've watched many of these short economic KZreadrs, and only recently discovered this channel, but am now comfortable saying hoser is a straight up analytical and comedic genius

  • @elmoisamac

    @elmoisamac

    6 ай бұрын

    He seamlessly covers so much ground and is funny while doing it. Quite a line to toe.

  • @jacobwragg727
    @jacobwragg727 Жыл бұрын

    I loved it when h0ser said “it’s h0sing time” truly one of the moments in the video

  • @dysdev

    @dysdev

    Жыл бұрын

    I loved it when Jacob said "it's Jacobbing time" truly one of the moments in the comment.

  • @jacobwragg727

    @jacobwragg727

    Жыл бұрын

    I loved it when DysfunctionalDev said “it’s jacobbing time” truly one of the comments of all time

  • @_utahraptor

    @_utahraptor

    Жыл бұрын

    I loved it when

  • @davidoneill7554

    @davidoneill7554

    Жыл бұрын

    Maybe the real h0ser was all the drawn anthropomorphic representations of countries that we made along the way

  • @jacobwragg727

    @jacobwragg727

    Жыл бұрын

    @@davidoneill7554 maybe we shouldn’t be sad that the video ended, but be glad about all the h0sers we met along the way

  • @dotdotdotdotdotdotdottod
    @dotdotdotdotdotdotdottod Жыл бұрын

    as somone who litterly lives in south korea k can tell you we industrialised way too quickly. we are seen as a 1st world nation yes but many things are still in 3rd world conditions. you cant expect a country to shoot up that gast and shedout every part of its 3rd world conditionings

  • @gianlucag100g

    @gianlucag100g

    Жыл бұрын

    What's 3rd world?

  • @avus-kw2f213

    @avus-kw2f213

    Жыл бұрын

    So it’s kinda like the USSR ?

  • @shadowfreaper8158

    @shadowfreaper8158

    Жыл бұрын

    @@avus-kw2f213 early ussr

  • @avus-kw2f213

    @avus-kw2f213

    Жыл бұрын

    @@shadowfreaper8158 thanks for correcting me but I would argue pre Nikita USSR

  • @rizkyadiyanto7922

    @rizkyadiyanto7922

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rami8896 like in america?

  • @YoungbleLift
    @YoungbleLift Жыл бұрын

    I may not represent entire Korean society but In my opinion in relationship with Japan and China, old people tends to hate Japan because they are close to the Japanese colonial period (1910~1945) but quite a few young Korean and Japanese like each other due to the cultural exchange. (K-pop, K-drama, Japanese food, anime&games) Rather, young people tends to dislike China due to the political issues. (China's Northeast Process, COVID-19, cultural differences) By the way, why the word '재벌' is pronounced 'chaebol'? 'Jaebeol' is more close pronunciation, ㅈ never sounds ch- (its more like j or z), chaebol sounds like '체벌' which means ''corporal punishment'...

  • @Ju_Tube23

    @Ju_Tube23

    Жыл бұрын

    젊은 한국인들은 덕분에 침략자 일본에 대한 피해자로서의 역사를 똑바로 보지 않고 잊어가는 민족으로 되어가고 있죠.

  • @u2beuser714

    @u2beuser714

    Жыл бұрын

    If "cultural difference" is a factor when disliking china then why not having the same approach towards japan? There is nothing south koreans could like about japan beyond political values , which is not sufficient enough to make both koreans and japanese like eachother, and japan and koreans have nothing in common culturally speaking

  • @hotcurry1108

    @hotcurry1108

    Жыл бұрын

    t͡ɕɛ̝bʌ̹ɭ

  • @dalius6633

    @dalius6633

    Жыл бұрын

    On that last point, if I had to work +16 hours daily just to "live" an average, run-of-the-mill life which consist of only eating and working, I would absolutely consider it a hellish punishment

  • @ciello___8307

    @ciello___8307

    Жыл бұрын

    @@u2beuser714 I think "cultural differences" is not the best way to put it. More like china is currently the biggest geopolitical threat to korea right now. They have the big military that could threaten korea's sea routes and whatnot, and they also support north korea's government in some ways too.

  • @Deltarious
    @Deltarious Жыл бұрын

    I actually do think South Korea will move slowly more and more into the same sphere as Japan. Not because they necessarily want to, but because it just *makes sense* to and their regional goals mostly align. That plus the rise of instant communication and the exporting of culture + time is tending to make the younger generations of each nation more favourable to each nation

  • @tenacious_takakumi2680

    @tenacious_takakumi2680

    Жыл бұрын

    I don’t want to be a Chinese rooter but I think that both S.Korea and Japan will fall under Chinese influence someday. China will not controll both countries but both countries will be more dependent on China, rather than US. I mean in past history, China has been the dominant power in East-Asia for centuries so I don’t see it being changed. The day China changes its political views will mark the day when China becomes really the country of the center, when Japan and S.Korea will collaborate more with China than US

  • @nviolet152

    @nviolet152

    Жыл бұрын

    "time is tending to make the younger generations of each nation more favourable to each nation" Nah, in South Korea hatred towards Japan is a national project. It won't go away. There is a short video here on youtube where a young Korean guy burns the Japanese flag (don't remember the modern one or the rising sun one). That video has MILLIONS of views. I'm Russian, and although there definitely are TONS of propaganda in schools (most of it is anti-US though, not anti-Germany), most young people just hate our own government, not US or Germany. The word "patriotism" was HEAVILY mocked, as nationality, religion, duty, war heroes - all that bullsh1t is what's typically used in propaganda. When I learned around 5 years ago that Koreans legit hate Japan and sit on their isolationist naver, I was in shock. I just could not imagine YOUNG PEOPLE to be r3tarded enough to buy government's propaganda. But they do.

  • @Ducci__

    @Ducci__

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nviolet152 I think that watching couple of videos and mocking people for their lack of critical thinking is quite funny. There always exists an extreme ends in any groups, and those videos you watched are the collections of "spicy" ones for the views after all. I can easily google young russian nationalists burning american flags, so does that mean russian youngs are brainwashed by nationalist propagandas? No. like it is, we are no different. the fun thing is, in recent research conducted shows that Japan is not even in top 3 hated country. but China/Russia is. as you can see there is no such thing as "national project" for hatred, the current geopolitical situation is what mostly decides it.

  • @sweetwinterpear

    @sweetwinterpear

    Жыл бұрын

    @RisingSunCountry Imagine thinking a nation US armed force is being stationed is on same position with China lmao

  • @BrakeCoach

    @BrakeCoach

    11 ай бұрын

    @@nviolet152"korea hates japan! See? Heres a video of one (1) korean guy burning the japanese flag! This is total proof that koreans hate japan!" Literally most youth in korea do not feel hatred towards japan, nor do the majority of japanese youth feel hatred towards korea. If anything, cultural exchange between the two demographics have been occuring, probably one the most in its history.

  • @6ftTiny216
    @6ftTiny216 Жыл бұрын

    I can confirm the joke about the average Korean thirdgrader is, in fact, no joke at all. I thought English in Berlin, for a while and tutored a Korean kid for a while. Precisely third grade. Loved that little kid to death. Dude was chewing up ~ 9th grade math like it was nothing. We had to get him into a bi-lingual school quick, otherwise german authorities were threatening to take him away from his mom (very long story, but bottom line - fuck standard german educational institutions _|_). My boy went from barely any English to getting accepted with flying colors. And that was all while battling Tourette's. Must have cussed me out a million times in Korean. Proudest moment of my life 🥳

  • @liben5052

    @liben5052

    Жыл бұрын

    Lmao at least it was korean. That's a huge amount of stress to handle at such a young age, hope he's doing well. And good on you for helping him on his journey, that's some life-changing support you gave him

  • @GooglePleaseEmployMe

    @GooglePleaseEmployMe

    Жыл бұрын

    ngl if u can't do calculus by 6th grade u r screwed in south kor

  • @Hanfugirl_Hanzi

    @Hanfugirl_Hanzi

    Жыл бұрын

    East Asia's Poland=Korea

  • @LimeBoy-oo6ph

    @LimeBoy-oo6ph

    Жыл бұрын

    Wait why were the authorities threatening to take him away??

  • @6ftTiny216

    @6ftTiny216

    Жыл бұрын

    @@LimeBoy-oo6ph It's a bit of a long story, but basically, he and his mom (double doctorate in music) came to Berlin because of his older sister, who was already a genius harp player at age 13-14. So she got some opportunities with the Berlin Philharmonic/UDK (Universität der Künste, one of the best art schools in Europe, apparently). At that time, when moving to Germany, kids coming in from abroad had to go to so-called 'Greeting schools' - either they didn't have time to apply him for anything else, or his mom was hoping it would be ok (generally, those schools are a bit more specialised, in order to help the children integrate more easily). It was not. This was in the early aftermath of the refugee wave from Syria, so the school was full of kids that didn't want to be there and were lashing out at the one asian kid. Plus, the teachers turned out to be shit, so he got mistreated on that front, as well. Which would all cause his Tourette's to get worse, leading to more bullying. So his mom kept him away and went to talk to them multiple times. Finally, they called a hearing in the school, where she told them she wants the pull him out of there. However, in Germany it is illegal so much so that you can get fined and PROSECUTED if you keep your kid out of school long enough. So the staff there, sticks up their asses and all, wouldn't make an exception for him, AND ALSO threatened her they would alert the authorities, should she be unable to get him into a new school in a very limited amount of time. I was already teaching him at that point, but we kicked things into high gear once we found out about it. He'd also started a treatment for the Tourette's, so we pulled through, all together.

  • @rkang9478
    @rkang9478 Жыл бұрын

    As a Korean who already flew the f out of my home country and has lived in Canada, I'd say you are right on every subject. Fun to visit, definitely not to live in. It hurts watching things getting only worse there 😢

  • @marioplayer1410

    @marioplayer1410

    Жыл бұрын

    Please stay in Canada permenantely.

  • @whatisgoingon298

    @whatisgoingon298

    Жыл бұрын

    If you are young and just getting started, I think you can get a lot more job opportunities abroad for the same amount of effort. If you have a good amount of money saved up for retirement, South Korea is a great place to live (fast delivery, good transportation, fast government workers/services, good internet, good facilities and sports programs for the elderly, easily accessible medical care, etc)

  • @youwayo

    @youwayo

    Жыл бұрын

    Thats Japan in a nutshell

  • @ignorantethan656

    @ignorantethan656

    Жыл бұрын

    oh god he went to Canada

  • @yokolee5243

    @yokolee5243

    Жыл бұрын

    Smoke some weed

  • @yuchan063
    @yuchan06314 күн бұрын

    South Korea is like extreme version of Japan

  • @RedDrake110
    @RedDrake110 Жыл бұрын

    the explainations are concise and accurate. the national animals and MS paint subtitles are hilarious AF. Love your content, man. Keep up the good work.

  • @StateoftheWorld
    @StateoftheWorld Жыл бұрын

    Whenever I don't have a new h0ser video, I'm also having a hidden crisis

  • @zoop1640
    @zoop1640 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for sharing this video. As a Korean I am literally amused by how you understood and explained the deep rooted problems of the Korean society. I have lived my entire life in Korea until 27, and just flew to US for higher education. And I can feel marriage and having kids in US is much more conceivable than back in the days in Korea where I felt those are hard to afford and felt like a difficult step. The divided classisms in Korea is what makes youngsters miserable and drag them down. And unless the rotten politicians who only fight for their seats get extracted, bright future for Korea would never ever be perceivable. 😂

  • @kushaltiwari3668

    @kushaltiwari3668

    11 ай бұрын

    Its all because of misogyny. Women should not give birth in patriarchal world

  • @dev-playing-gt

    @dev-playing-gt

    11 ай бұрын

    Could you tell me about the lives in the US? Though I'm considering moving to somewhere else, I worry about high expenses for living and education compared to salaries.

  • @preachin3245

    @preachin3245

    11 ай бұрын

    ⁠​⁠​⁠@@dev-playing-gtLife in the US more so as an Asian American living in the Bay Area is pretty alright (I never faced discrimination because there is a strong Asian presence from where I live) however the US can be very expensive if you choose to reside in California especially Los Angeles or any Silicon Valley Cities!! I really wouldn’t recommend living here because college education can also be very expensive (such as USC tuition) depending on which college you go to but if you are financially well-off I would recommend living in a city that is regarded as safe and not cities like Oakland or San Francisco lol.

  • @preachin3245

    @preachin3245

    11 ай бұрын

    ⁠​⁠@@dev-playing-gtAlso, the opportunities given in the Bay Area are also amazing. My High School offered optional AM/PM classes or after school courses through a CTE School which give certifications and first-hand knowledge ahead on what field / course you chose to take. I personally chose a cybersecurity course which also gave me college credit and my CTE teacher who worked on that field for 20+ years previously taught at Berkeley and Stanford so the quality of education is nice too.

  • @speakupyt4900

    @speakupyt4900

    8 ай бұрын

    Didn't these ''naysayers'' has been talking ''hidden crisis'' for the 75 years????? !!!😏😏😏 Slice and dice it all you want, still Korea is 1,000 better than the rest of your countries and only going stronger, lol !!!🔥🔥🔥

  • @TheHolyMrH
    @TheHolyMrH Жыл бұрын

    This episode was superb. Well done lad

  • @user-fv1yp3xy4r
    @user-fv1yp3xy4r Жыл бұрын

    You seem to have a lot of research! I appreciate you👏👏

  • @hyunjustin9227
    @hyunjustin9227 Жыл бұрын

    Studied 16 hours a day for 360 days and I failed the exam that takes place once a year. Now I have to move to Australia to go to an University.

  • @angusyates828

    @angusyates828

    Жыл бұрын

    Don't get too excited. I'm Australian and things aren't good here either.

  • @Iris-uj5sv

    @Iris-uj5sv

    Жыл бұрын

    @@angusyates828 atleast the education system is better than in korea and the high suicidal rate among students

  • @colmar7002

    @colmar7002

    Жыл бұрын

    @@angusyates828 yup, most Koreans seemed to have some sort of fantasy about the west, but in reality we also have our own set of problems.

  • @angusyates828

    @angusyates828

    Жыл бұрын

    @@colmar7002 So true.

  • @tsaoh5572
    @tsaoh5572 Жыл бұрын

    If you know the history of their country, all you can really do is simply respect Koreans. Such amazing resilience.

  • @brutallyhonest3529

    @brutallyhonest3529

    Жыл бұрын

    I respect the Koreans. Nice arse place.

  • @lizardking3979

    @lizardking3979

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, real hard workers, they are. But they rose from the ash largely thanks to American security and trade guarantees. With those disappearing quickly, they are pretty much doomed.

  • @user-dt7uq1qw7t

    @user-dt7uq1qw7t

    Жыл бұрын

    But there is hope Since Korea has excellent human resources as a result of hardening education, it is now necessary to pursue the active use of talent in the right place and in the right place. In addition, the elderly poverty and the suicide rate of the elderly should be carefully approached as policy works It is ironic that the elderly employment rate is the number one in the OECD and the elderly poverty rate is also the number one. And what are Korea's advantages for Korea to develop further? Know this accurately and improve the disadvantages while maximizing the advantages. There are side effects of compressed growth, but as Korea has grown rapidly, citizens' consciousness and political system have developed to some extent The following data may be helpful in training Korea. The best rankings should be maximized and supplemented. According to the British Economist's democracy index, Korea is ranked 16th out of 167 countries surveyed by 2021, higher than Japan, Austria, the United States and France. France is surprisingly empowered by the president, abuse and social unrest. Next, the Public Integrity Index, which objectively measures corruption in a society, shows that Korea is higher than Japan and Belgium among 117 countries surveyed (out of 200 countries), 18 mandates similar to Luxembourg and Costa Rica The data is published annually by the European Centre for Anti-Corruption Capabilities. As of 2022, Korea is ranked 43rd out of 180 countries surveyed. It is similar to the 42nd ranked US, 58th ranked Japan, 72nd ranked Italy and Israel. Last year, it was higher than Taiwan and the United States. However, the ranking of media credibility is close to the bottom of major countries with the US and France According to the data evaluating the competitiveness of the cultural field, Korea ranked second in the world in the soft power ranking announced by Monocle of Germany And in the data released by the UK agency, 19th place between Balgie and Ireland! The country's credit rating is third in the world (higher than the US and UK), and the innovation index, which assesses how innovative a country is, is announced separately by the European Union and Bloomberg Communications. R & D spending is the No. 1 OECD and e-government competitiveness is the No. 1 OECD Next, let's look at how mature the society is (including civic consciousness) and how the quality of life is measured. According to the Social Development Index, which shows how advanced society is, Korea is higher than the US, Singapore, Italy, UK and Israel by 2021, and 16th place similar to Belgium and Luxembourg In detail, it ranked 5th in personal safety, 5th in health and welfare, 1st in information and communication accessibility, and 1st in higher education accessibility among 200 countries. It is ranked 19th in nutrition and medical support, 26th in water and sanitation facilities, 25th in individual rights, 30th in individual freedom and choice, 32nd in residential environment, and 26th in basic knowledge accessibility. These are also high, but it is a little ambiguous to say good? The environment is 80 delegates due to the neighboring country (details are brought as of 2020) According to the Human Development Index, which assesses the development level of the people based on average life expectancy, education level, per capita income, etc., Korea was higher than Luxembourg in Europe in 2020 and 19th in the last year Britain was ranked 18th and Austria, the US, Spain, Italy and France were ranked lower than South Korea This data is published annually by the United Nations Organization. There is a separate ranking of human development indexes that reflect inequality. Based on this data, Korea ranked 21st higher than other developed countries such as France, USA, Singapore, Hong Kong and Israel In the 2021 World's Best Country Rankings released by US News, Korea ranked 15th among Norway, Denmark, Italy and Finland among 200 countries In detail, it ranked 18th in quality of life, 8th in dynamism, 6th in innovation, 7th in cultural influence, 5th in entrepreneurship In terms of quality of life, public education development is 74, economic stability is 85, job quality is 64, public health system is 55.7 However, family stability and price stability are low, and animal rights are only 18 out of 100 points. In addition, in the OECD Better Life Index, Korea is ranked 28th overall in 2020 (out of 37 countries). In detail, it is ranked 5th in housing quality and accessibility, 2nd in citizen participation, 11th in education and technology, 17th in quality and availability, and 14th in social equality Income is 22nd and safety is 24th, which is normal (recently rising to 11th) In the questionnaire survey on health, which is a subjective item here, the response is very negative, so the overall ranking is not high The Vulnerable Country Index, which shows how stable a country is in many areas, shows that Korea is in a very stable group with France and Belgium, and is higher than the stable group with the United States and Britain This data shows that the criteria for calculation are power struggle, social division, illegal election, minority suppression, recession, manpower outflow, development imbalance, education, public transportation, security, infrastructure, health, religious freedom and civil liberties, Other human rights, establishment and practice of the rule of law, population stability, national credit rating, etc. Finally, let's look at materials that are difficult to categorize as specific items. According to the Economic Freedom Index, which measures how economic freedom and legal stability are guaranteed, Korea ranked 27th among 177 countries between Sweden, Norway and Malaysia in 2016 It is currently ranked 25th, higher than Japan, which ranked 30th, and France, which ranked 64th.

  • @user-dt7uq1qw7t

    @user-dt7uq1qw7t

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lizardking3979 what are Korea's advantages for Korea to develop further? Know this accurately and improve the disadvantages while maximizing the advantages. There are side effects of compressed growth, but as Korea has grown rapidly, citizens' consciousness and political system have developed to some extent The following data may be helpful in training Korea. The best rankings should be maximized and supplemented. According to the British Economist's democracy index, Korea is ranked 16th out of 167 countries surveyed by 2021, higher than Japan, Austria, the United States and France. France is surprisingly empowered by the president, abuse and social unrest. Next, the Public Integrity Index, which objectively measures corruption in a society, shows that Korea is higher than Japan and Belgium among 117 countries surveyed (out of 200 countries), 18 mandates similar to Luxembourg and Costa Rica The data is published annually by the European Centre for Anti-Corruption Capabilities. As of 2022, Korea is ranked 43rd out of 180 countries surveyed. It is similar to the 42nd ranked US, 58th ranked Japan, 72nd ranked Italy and Israel. Last year, it was higher than Taiwan and the United States. However, the ranking of media credibility is close to the bottom of major countries with the US and France According to the data evaluating the competitiveness of the cultural field, Korea ranked second in the world in the soft power ranking announced by Monocle of Germany And in the data released by the UK agency, 19th place between Balgie and Ireland! The country's credit rating is third in the world (higher than the US and UK), and the innovation index, which assesses how innovative a country is, is announced separately by the European Union and Bloomberg Communications. R & D spending is the No. 1 OECD and e-government competitiveness is the No. 1 OECD Next, let's look at how mature the society is (including civic consciousness) and how the quality of life is measured. According to the Social Development Index, which shows how advanced society is, Korea is higher than the US, Singapore, Italy, UK and Israel by 2021, and 16th place similar to Belgium and Luxembourg In detail, it ranked 5th in personal safety, 5th in health and welfare, 1st in information and communication accessibility, and 1st in higher education accessibility among 200 countries. It is ranked 19th in nutrition and medical support, 26th in water and sanitation facilities, 25th in individual rights, 30th in individual freedom and choice, 32nd in residential environment, and 26th in basic knowledge accessibility. These are also high, but it is a little ambiguous to say good? The environment is 80 delegates due to the neighboring country (details are brought as of 2020) According to the Human Development Index, which assesses the development level of the people based on average life expectancy, education level, per capita income, etc., Korea was higher than Luxembourg in Europe in 2020 and 19th in the last year Britain was ranked 18th and Austria, the US, Spain, Italy and France were ranked lower than South Korea This data is published annually by the United Nations Organization. There is a separate ranking of human development indexes that reflect inequality. Based on this data, Korea ranked 21st higher than other developed countries such as France, USA, Singapore, Hong Kong and Israel In the 2021 World's Best Country Rankings released by US News, Korea ranked 15th among Norway, Denmark, Italy and Finland among 200 countries In detail, it ranked 18th in quality of life, 8th in dynamism, 6th in innovation, 7th in cultural influence, 5th in entrepreneurship In terms of quality of life, public education development is 74, economic stability is 85, job quality is 64, public health system is 55.7 However, family stability and price stability are low, and animal rights are only 18 out of 100 points. In addition, in the OECD Better Life Index, Korea is ranked 28th overall in 2020 (out of 37 countries). In detail, it is ranked 5th in housing quality and accessibility, 2nd in citizen participation, 11th in education and technology, 17th in quality and availability, and 14th in social equality Income is 22nd and safety is 24th, which is normal (recently rising to 11th) In the questionnaire survey on health, which is a subjective item here, the response is very negative, so the overall ranking is not high The Vulnerable Country Index, which shows how stable a country is in many areas, shows that Korea is in a very stable group with France and Belgium, and is higher than the stable group with the United States and Britain This data shows that the criteria for calculation are power struggle, social division, illegal election, minority suppression, recession, manpower outflow, development imbalance, education, public transportation, security, infrastructure, health, religious freedom and civil liberties, Other human rights, establishment and practice of the rule of law, population stability, national credit rating, etc. Finally, let's look at materials that are difficult to categorize as specific items. According to the Economic Freedom Index, which measures how economic freedom and legal stability are guaranteed, Korea ranked 27th among 177 countries between Sweden, Norway and Malaysia in 2016 It is currently ranked 25th, higher than Japan, which ranked 30th, and France, which ranked 64th.

  • @mason7645

    @mason7645

    Жыл бұрын

    But in the other hand, we can find that we are miserable and suffering all time. I mean, other countries has suffers too but, we always have short and small golden ages. Even we are having a glorious and the most powerful age in all South Korean history, but it hasn't even been 100 years and we have to end it, Diving in to New Dark Age.

  • @nikolaizaicev9297
    @nikolaizaicev9297Ай бұрын

    That is one of the rare unbiased overviews on youtube I have see untill now, without any BS. Nice work mate, everything is on point and presented in a simple language.

  • @KamilleBidanApologist
    @KamilleBidanApologistАй бұрын

    I love consuming info thru this dynamic format ngl 😂 Great stuff!

  • @anastasiabutton
    @anastasiabutton Жыл бұрын

    I've been living in South Korea for a short time and still learning a bunch. I can, however, attest to the 3rd grader's education level, specifically in math and English. I'm an English teacher at an after-school English academy (Hagwan/Hagwon), and the number of hours these kids are in school is intense. 7-8 hours at their public or private schools, then 6 hours/week at the English academy, and many go to other academies for math, etc. Out of my 80+/- kids, only 3 play sports with their schools, and almost as many are involved with creative arts. It's a shift for me as a teacher and I don't feel bad for them if they drift off into sleep (and still pass our tests with flying colors). Everything is about their education and getting better scores than their peers - there is also cultural optics that are included in this that have their own problems. I have found, however, creative and critical thinking is lacking (around the world as well, but incredibly prevalent there). It's about accomplishment with what is on paper and resumes and life is on hold in many instances. And don't get me started on the work culture. That's a whole new topic that takes a video like yours to help explain. I was lucky with my academy. They have a nice work/life balance, but not all are equal within our academy and that is very interesting.

  • @R_Grey032

    @R_Grey032

    Жыл бұрын

    Honestly not surprised to know that the school/academy cultures didn't change from when I was in. We're stubborn in a way that we know the problems yet we leave them be, because changing it will simply cost more and won't guarantee better net income. While most kids are taught with a competitive mindset and are forced to take the paths chosen by their parents from the start, I was lucky to have my parents let me choose my ways. I hated competition, I hated how schools worked, and I was confident that I can do better without their effort to turn me around. English at schools, for example, is taught in more of an academic way. The exam papers are full of questions about grammar. And if you don't get a good score out of that, you're labeled just bad at English. Kids are forced to learn that way as well, alongside after school academies that teach in the exact same way in most cases. Veering off the course is simply being insubordinate, and getting 4 hours of sleep a day is considered normal. I ignored all of that. I learned my English in my own way through the internet, and the only part I lacked was speaking because native speakers are hard to find in this country. I'd often get flying scores in the exams, not because I learned everything they taught me, but because I picked it up as a language, not a subject. I'd often get questioned how I achieve that, and I don't answer. Learning English through internet and gaming is something out of the world for most teachers' mind. Now I'm out of my university, looking for a job not just in this country but also abroad. I often talk to my friends from all around the world, hearing their opinions on different matters, and sometimes gaming together. This language alone opened up so many more possibilities for me, and I hope more kids get to experience it. Korean is not used anywhere else than Korea, while English is used worldwide. It just might help them see problems from other directions.

  • @jathebest2835

    @jathebest2835

    Жыл бұрын

    @@R_Grey032 I like the fact that you learn English on the Internet😁 Same here, and I'm even learning programming languages for my future opportunities. Learning how to program online is possible as well😎

  • @MrAsianPie
    @MrAsianPie Жыл бұрын

    "The f*cking hate eachother" Yep, that's been Asia since the existance of Asia

  • @Quincy_010_

    @Quincy_010_

    Жыл бұрын

    Or the world since the existence of the world

  • @eddienutts673

    @eddienutts673

    Жыл бұрын

    East Asia is the OG balkans region

  • @axelNodvon2047

    @axelNodvon2047

    Жыл бұрын

    A very simplified and wrong idea of east asian history

  • @iloveplumpgrannies174

    @iloveplumpgrannies174

    Жыл бұрын

    Not really. They started hating each other when USA entered the scene.

  • @brutallyhonest3529

    @brutallyhonest3529

    Жыл бұрын

    If Japan didn't exist, Korea and China would've got a long.

  • @eXit-mm3zg
    @eXit-mm3zg3 ай бұрын

    This video was amazingly entertaining and informative. Thank you

  • @devonwilliams136
    @devonwilliams136Ай бұрын

    So basically North Korea is Orwellian South Korea is Huxleyan

  • @baronvonjo1929
    @baronvonjo1929 Жыл бұрын

    I swear every Korean media I ever see and I have see a good bit has the main charcter drowning in debt and pretty miserable. I have seen that apparently loads of elderly in the nation are struggling as well. They never got their money. Like they never got the savings because SK developed so fast and thus they have to keep working.

  • @matthewchi5292

    @matthewchi5292

    Жыл бұрын

    I just realized this too. My all time favorite K-Drama Comedy series "High Kick through the Roof" has its plot kick off because of debt and the concept of having very little money and having to resort to sad and drastic means to stay afloat is present throughout the whole series. And this series was made in like 2005-2009

  • @loading2112

    @loading2112

    Жыл бұрын

    That made me wonder. two of Korean best known production, Parasite and Squid Games, have the same premises; people with financial struggle doing everything they can to survive.

  • @GenerationX1984

    @GenerationX1984

    Жыл бұрын

    People are beginning to figure out that the feudalism style wage theft that is characteristic of capitalism is a failure and a scam! So the whole system needs an overhaul.

  • @chocoholic5645

    @chocoholic5645

    Жыл бұрын

    I dont think what u think is true. All of people i know including not close who are over 60 enjoye their life a lot. We think elderly is the ones who have both money and time and because of that they enjoy working out and know how to enjoy life. It is youngsters who is economically in difficult situation ingeneral. Of course there are old people who is suffereing financially but those exist in every county.

  • @user-fz6hz3uc9x

    @user-fz6hz3uc9x

    Жыл бұрын

    평범한 중산층 얘기는 극적이지 않으니까 밑바닥 이야기를 쓰는거지

  • @ethansaltmere
    @ethansaltmere Жыл бұрын

    It seems like the biggest problem for Korea is not the chaebols or even the birth rate but rather the growing global geopolitical tensions. Korea's largest trade partner is China yet it relies on the USA for protection from the North. That seems like a very difficult, if not impossible line to tread in the future. At some point they will have to make it more clear which line they stand on and it will the harm the country either way.

  • @joeysung311

    @joeysung311

    Жыл бұрын

    what do you mean more clear which line we stand on? It's already pretty clear is it not

  • @ethansaltmere

    @ethansaltmere

    Жыл бұрын

    @@joeysung311 If tensions increase between China and the USA - for example China invades Taiwan - and the USA imposes sanctions like it has on Russia, would Korea follow? It would cripple their economy if they did. I was the under the impression the previous administration under President Moon was seeking to toe a line between the two countries in the interest of the health and continued growth of Korea's economy. It would also cripple the USA's economy if they did it right now in 2022 to an extent but they are already taking measures to wean themselves off Chinese dependance in many different sectors. The picture could be very different in 2030.

  • @samuraiboi2735

    @samuraiboi2735

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ethansaltmere actually china's economy is already collapsing plus with protests because of usa not exporting chips to china but i know what you mean cus of the tensions between the two ever increasing but the sk part that might be later cus main focus is whether usa will continue to stop chip export to china or recontinue the chip export idk what will happen next.

  • @eb_u

    @eb_u

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@ethansaltmereIt is very difficult to choose one side, but most Koreans hate China and appreciate the United States.

  • @stevenbaksh5545

    @stevenbaksh5545

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ethansaltmere and they still have to worry about North Korea not the Kim regime but when DPRK collapses someone has to step up to control the situation in the North therefore they would have to make some kind of deal with China

  • @ep1c_cow53
    @ep1c_cow53 Жыл бұрын

    As a south korean citizen, this video has made me realize how fucked I am

  • @Sebastian-gf2fk
    @Sebastian-gf2fk6 ай бұрын

    Imposible to not love this channel.

  • @corymorimacori1059
    @corymorimacori1059 Жыл бұрын

    0:03 MacArthur: Nuke Em! Truman: No! MacArthur: NUKE EM! Truman: NO! MacArthur: AH COME ON! Truman: You’re fired

  • @javo5270

    @javo5270

    Жыл бұрын

    OVERSIMPLIFIED

  • @donaldmcronald2331

    @donaldmcronald2331

    Жыл бұрын

    Pure gold!

  • @somezsaltz6835

    @somezsaltz6835

    Жыл бұрын

    thought it was Eisenhower who told him no

  • @sisophon1982

    @sisophon1982

    Жыл бұрын

    @@somezsaltz6835 that was 1950-51, Eisenhower wasn't president until 52

  • @ElectrostatiCrow
    @ElectrostatiCrow Жыл бұрын

    Countries have companies but Samsung is a company with a country.

  • @Sceptonic

    @Sceptonic

    Жыл бұрын

    Modern day Dutch East Indies/British East India company

  • @ElectrostatiCrow

    @ElectrostatiCrow

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Sceptonic They better hope Samsung doesn't become like standard fruit. Its power over South Korea is nearly at that level.

  • @user-fz6hz3uc9x

    @user-fz6hz3uc9x

    Жыл бұрын

    Samsung is not the only big company in SK. SK LG HYUNDAI HANWHA POSCO HYOSUNG NAVER LOTTE ect.. So many companies are there.

  • @amadexi
    @amadexi Жыл бұрын

    I now work in Europe and the difference in life/work balance and income is huge. You literally work much less, with close to 0 pressure and you earn more.

  • @lemonynora
    @lemonynora Жыл бұрын

    Love your honesty about ads

  • @dontstare2781
    @dontstare2781 Жыл бұрын

    Dude this is the 1st time i came across your channel. Never ever have i listened to geopolitics which was explained as entertaining as you did. The amount of edit, humour, funny dialogues etc that has gone into the making of this video is insane. You earned a sub mate. Keep growing.

  • @MonroeSim

    @MonroeSim

    Жыл бұрын

    Amen brother

  • @superturtlesvideos2935

    @superturtlesvideos2935

    Жыл бұрын

    Where was the humor and funny dialogue?

  • @speakupyt4900

    @speakupyt4900

    8 ай бұрын

    Didn't these ''naysayers'' has been talking ''hidden crisis'' for the 75 years????? !!!😏😏😏 Slice and dice it all you want, still Korea is 1,000 better than the rest of your countries and only going stronger, lol !!!🔥🔥🔥

  • @subey5
    @subey5 Жыл бұрын

    Hi. As a Korean, thank you for letting the world know about our country's crisis. Right now, Korea is clearly in a state of crisis. Despite the tremendous economic growth of the past, today's young generation has given up dating, marriage, and childbearing. In South Korea, hatred between generations, regions, genders, and political ideologies is extremely widespread. Most of the younger generation is dying alone, afraid to form a relationship with anyone else. However, the vested interests are not paying attention to the pain of young people. As the number of older people increases, their vote becomes more important. Therefore, the new policies are only policies that kill young people. I am so moved that someone who is not Korean can tell this story. Thank you for the wonderful video. 고맙습니다.

  • @pocarisweet8336

    @pocarisweet8336

    Жыл бұрын

    If it makes you feel any better, most if not all countries are experiencing some form of crisis.

  • @daebak7370

    @daebak7370

    Жыл бұрын

    Antichrist spirit moving all over the world. We are in the endtimes. Repent and seek jesus christ for salvation.

  • @user-dt7uq1qw7t

    @user-dt7uq1qw7t

    Жыл бұрын

    @@pocarisweet8336 what are Korea's advantages for Korea to develop further? Know this accurately and improve the disadvantages while maximizing the advantages. There are side effects of compressed growth, but as Korea has grown rapidly, citizens' consciousness and political system have developed to some extent The following data may be helpful in training Korea. The best rankings should be maximized and supplemented. According to the British Economist's democracy index, Korea is ranked 16th out of 167 countries surveyed by 2021, higher than Japan, Austria, the United States and France. France is surprisingly empowered by the president, abuse and social unrest. Next, the Public Integrity Index, which objectively measures corruption in a society, shows that Korea is higher than Japan and Belgium among 117 countries surveyed (out of 200 countries), 18 mandates similar to Luxembourg and Costa Rica The data is published annually by the European Centre for Anti-Corruption Capabilities. As of 2022, Korea is ranked 43rd out of 180 countries surveyed. It is similar to the 42nd ranked US, 58th ranked Japan, 72nd ranked Italy and Israel. Last year, it was higher than Taiwan and the United States. However, the ranking of media credibility is close to the bottom of major countries with the US and France According to the data evaluating the competitiveness of the cultural field, Korea ranked second in the world in the soft power ranking announced by Monocle of Germany And in the data released by the UK agency, 19th place between Balgie and Ireland! The country's credit rating is third in the world (higher than the US and UK), and the innovation index, which assesses how innovative a country is, is announced separately by the European Union and Bloomberg Communications. R & D spending is the No. 1 OECD and e-government competitiveness is the No. 1 OECD Next, let's look at how mature the society is (including civic consciousness) and how the quality of life is measured. According to the Social Development Index, which shows how advanced society is, Korea is higher than the US, Singapore, Italy, UK and Israel by 2021, and 16th place similar to Belgium and Luxembourg In detail, it ranked 5th in personal safety, 5th in health and welfare, 1st in information and communication accessibility, and 1st in higher education accessibility among 200 countries. It is ranked 19th in nutrition and medical support, 26th in water and sanitation facilities, 25th in individual rights, 30th in individual freedom and choice, 32nd in residential environment, and 26th in basic knowledge accessibility. These are also high, but it is a little ambiguous to say good? The environment is 80 delegates due to the neighboring country (details are brought as of 2020) According to the Human Development Index, which assesses the development level of the people based on average life expectancy, education level, per capita income, etc., Korea was higher than Luxembourg in Europe in 2020 and 19th in the last year Britain was ranked 18th and Austria, the US, Spain, Italy and France were ranked lower than South Korea This data is published annually by the United Nations Organization. There is a separate ranking of human development indexes that reflect inequality. Based on this data, Korea ranked 21st higher than other developed countries such as France, USA, Singapore, Hong Kong and Israel In the 2021 World's Best Country Rankings released by US News, Korea ranked 15th among Norway, Denmark, Italy and Finland among 200 countries In detail, it ranked 18th in quality of life, 8th in dynamism, 6th in innovation, 7th in cultural influence, 5th in entrepreneurship In terms of quality of life, public education development is 74, economic stability is 85, job quality is 64, public health system is 55.7 However, family stability and price stability are low, and animal rights are only 18 out of 100 points. In addition, in the OECD Better Life Index, Korea is ranked 28th overall in 2020 (out of 37 countries). In detail, it is ranked 5th in housing quality and accessibility, 2nd in citizen participation, 11th in education and technology, 17th in quality and availability, and 14th in social equality Income is 22nd and safety is 24th, which is normal (recently rising to 11th) In the questionnaire survey on health, which is a subjective item here, the response is very negative, so the overall ranking is not high The Vulnerable Country Index, which shows how stable a country is in many areas, shows that Korea is in a very stable group with France and Belgium, and is higher than the stable group with the United States and Britain This data shows that the criteria for calculation are power struggle, social division, illegal election, minority suppression, recession, manpower outflow, development imbalance, education, public transportation, security, infrastructure, health, religious freedom and civil liberties, Other human rights, establishment and practice of the rule of law, population stability, national credit rating, etc. Finally, let's look at materials that are difficult to categorize as specific items. According to the Economic Freedom Index, which measures how economic freedom and legal stability are guaranteed, Korea ranked 27th among 177 countries between Sweden, Norway and Malaysia in 2016 It is currently ranked 25th, higher than Japan, which ranked 30th, and France, which ranked 64th.

  • @user-dt7uq1qw7t

    @user-dt7uq1qw7t

    Жыл бұрын

    But there is hope Since Korea has excellent human resources as a result of hardening education, it is now necessary to pursue the active use of talent in the right place and in the right place. In addition, the elderly poverty and the suicide rate of the elderly should be carefully approached as policy works It is ironic that the elderly employment rate is the number one in the OECD and the elderly poverty rate is also the number one. And what are Korea's advantages for Korea to develop further? Know this accurately and improve the disadvantages while maximizing the advantages. There are side effects of compressed growth, but as Korea has grown rapidly, citizens' consciousness and political system have developed to some extent The following data may be helpful in training Korea. The best rankings should be maximized and supplemented. According to the British Economist's democracy index, Korea is ranked 16th out of 167 countries surveyed by 2021, higher than Japan, Austria, the United States and France. France is surprisingly empowered by the president, abuse and social unrest. Next, the Public Integrity Index, which objectively measures corruption in a society, shows that Korea is higher than Japan and Belgium among 117 countries surveyed (out of 200 countries), 18 mandates similar to Luxembourg and Costa Rica The data is published annually by the European Centre for Anti-Corruption Capabilities. As of 2022, Korea is ranked 43rd out of 180 countries surveyed. It is similar to the 42nd ranked US, 58th ranked Japan, 72nd ranked Italy and Israel. Last year, it was higher than Taiwan and the United States. However, the ranking of media credibility is close to the bottom of major countries with the US and France According to the data evaluating the competitiveness of the cultural field, Korea ranked second in the world in the soft power ranking announced by Monocle of Germany And in the data released by the UK agency, 19th place between Balgie and Ireland! The country's credit rating is third in the world (higher than the US and UK), and the innovation index, which assesses how innovative a country is, is announced separately by the European Union and Bloomberg Communications. R & D spending is the No. 1 OECD and e-government competitiveness is the No. 1 OECD Next, let's look at how mature the society is (including civic consciousness) and how the quality of life is measured. According to the Social Development Index, which shows how advanced society is, Korea is higher than the US, Singapore, Italy, UK and Israel by 2021, and 16th place similar to Belgium and Luxembourg In detail, it ranked 5th in personal safety, 5th in health and welfare, 1st in information and communication accessibility, and 1st in higher education accessibility among 200 countries. It is ranked 19th in nutrition and medical support, 26th in water and sanitation facilities, 25th in individual rights, 30th in individual freedom and choice, 32nd in residential environment, and 26th in basic knowledge accessibility. These are also high, but it is a little ambiguous to say good? The environment is 80 delegates due to the neighboring country (details are brought as of 2020) According to the Human Development Index, which assesses the development level of the people based on average life expectancy, education level, per capita income, etc., Korea was higher than Luxembourg in Europe in 2020 and 19th in the last year Britain was ranked 18th and Austria, the US, Spain, Italy and France were ranked lower than South Korea This data is published annually by the United Nations Organization. There is a separate ranking of human development indexes that reflect inequality. Based on this data, Korea ranked 21st higher than other developed countries such as France, USA, Singapore, Hong Kong and Israel In the 2021 World's Best Country Rankings released by US News, Korea ranked 15th among Norway, Denmark, Italy and Finland among 200 countries In detail, it ranked 18th in quality of life, 8th in dynamism, 6th in innovation, 7th in cultural influence, 5th in entrepreneurship In terms of quality of life, public education development is 74, economic stability is 85, job quality is 64, public health system is 55.7 However, family stability and price stability are low, and animal rights are only 18 out of 100 points. In addition, in the OECD Better Life Index, Korea is ranked 28th overall in 2020 (out of 37 countries). In detail, it is ranked 5th in housing quality and accessibility, 2nd in citizen participation, 11th in education and technology, 17th in quality and availability, and 14th in social equality Income is 22nd and safety is 24th, which is normal (recently rising to 11th) In the questionnaire survey on health, which is a subjective item here, the response is very negative, so the overall ranking is not high The Vulnerable Country Index, which shows how stable a country is in many areas, shows that Korea is in a very stable group with France and Belgium, and is higher than the stable group with the United States and Britain This data shows that the criteria for calculation are power struggle, social division, illegal election, minority suppression, recession, manpower outflow, development imbalance, education, public transportation, security, infrastructure, health, religious freedom and civil liberties, Other human rights, establishment and practice of the rule of law, population stability, national credit rating, etc. Finally, let's look at materials that are difficult to categorize as specific items. According to the Economic Freedom Index, which measures how economic freedom and legal stability are guaranteed, Korea ranked 27th among 177 countries between Sweden, Norway and Malaysia in 2016 It is currently ranked 25th, higher than Japan, which ranked 30th, and France, which ranked 64th.

  • @John-em4vf

    @John-em4vf

    Жыл бұрын

    @@user-dt7uq1qw7t As another Korean, I want to say that data and statistics based on the rules and systems of the west do not mean anything. The more important thing to sustain and develop a "nation" is how people are integrated and willing to grow regardelss of its political, economic, and society. Just think of the compressed but successful rapid economic growth from 1960 to 1980. I analyze a lot of data as a business analyst, but I do not matter the data itself a lot. It is useful to expect something, but itself does not predict anything.

  • @tangbein
    @tangbeinАй бұрын

    One thing I've noticed is how interested westerners are in the crisis surrounding japan and south korea. If it was a african or middle eastern or even south american country they wouldn't care.

  • @Imperial_Dynamics
    @Imperial_Dynamics6 ай бұрын

    Amazing video, informative yet funny. Love from Greece

  • @gamerrevolutionary6615
    @gamerrevolutionary6615 Жыл бұрын

    Hey I just wanted to say I love your videos. Your format of condensing complex geopolitical problems into 10 to 15 minute videos is awesome. It really helps me stay up to date with current world politics.

  • @lucianoosorio5942
    @lucianoosorio5942 Жыл бұрын

    “Joe McCarthy, Richard Nixon, Studebaker, Television,North Korea, South Korea, Marylin Monroe.” Billy Joel

  • @MrAsianPie

    @MrAsianPie

    Жыл бұрын

    This says a lot about the current political conditions in Korea

  • @dallas9397

    @dallas9397

    Жыл бұрын

    *We didn’t start the fire!*

  • @freeman10000

    @freeman10000

    Жыл бұрын

    " Spuntnik, Zhou Enlai, Bridge on the River Kwai"

  • @baquavirusded6654
    @baquavirusded665429 күн бұрын

    came to korea in hopes of starting a new life all together but now that i have been living here for a while it do sometimes seem like i made a wrong decision in my life, all starting from the lack of employment, cost of living here and so on...

  • @huntress1013
    @huntress10134 ай бұрын

    The birthrate is actually 7.5 by now and dropping (they just had to close almost ten elementary schools in Seoul because the number of students was too low and it is now starting with junior high and high school too), also everyone is miserable and no one marries. Also the biggest chunk live in Seoul and the smaller towns are becoming ghost towns. Just grand. Honestly most Koreans I know who were able to escape Korea and now live in Europe have seriously zero interest in going back.

  • @fly463

    @fly463

    3 ай бұрын

    7.5 ? 😳 It will be 0.68 in 2024 😅

  • @fly463

    @fly463

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Notthebest45 ohh u meant per 1000

  • @nathand2264
    @nathand2264 Жыл бұрын

    Thes videos are literally the best informational videos on KZread keep up the good stuff

  • @pedroleal1078

    @pedroleal1078

    Жыл бұрын

    It's informational in some way, but nothing tells us that it is a good source. Getting information from these videos is not a good way of learning...

  • @teachmetelugu7320

    @teachmetelugu7320

    Жыл бұрын

    @@pedroleal1078 it gives you a big idea picture and trains your thinking to connect the dots across multiple realms...i love this video and really think it is invaluable

  • @dontworry4945
    @dontworry4945 Жыл бұрын

    I'm noticing that there are patterns to economics: having resources = pillaged and plundered (I.e. subsaharan Africa, Russia, Arabia) Having access to trade = $$$ (minus economic security) Having a defensible position is always preferred but having an educated population does much better for securing the ideals of a country. I wonder what would come about with s Mars colony. Obviously it's a very defensible position but what resources would thru procure and how would they transport them to the old world?

  • @Ruiseal

    @Ruiseal

    Жыл бұрын

    Could be used as a astroid mining hub and with enough time agriculture (does not need to deal with pesky environmental and biodiversty laws)

  • @khangnguyenthaiduy9129

    @khangnguyenthaiduy9129

    Жыл бұрын

    The 3 things you said resources/trade, defend and population are the 3 fundamental elements to create any civilizations. First, in order to create a place for people to live, you will need to create products that people could use. If you have the resource, people will automatically choose to live in that place to enjoy the resource. If the place is the middleman to trade between other places with different resources, people will live there to enjoy resources from multiple places (trade). Both 2 ways have their own advantages and disadvantages. Then, you will need defensible position to defend the products. If you have defend but no resources/trade, probably no one will live there. (Looking at Northern Canada and Siberia) Finally, an ideology. People in that civilization needs to have the same belief so that even when you fail to protect the land and your products, your people with that belief will try to revive their own civilization. (That's why India and China despite being conquered so many times in history still remained as a civilization while... Rome despite being born at the same time as those 2, broke apart into Europe) About Mars... I think the first step of human colony on Mars would be a mining colony. Extracting resources from Mars like minerals and then ship them back to Earth is much easier than say... producing Iphone there.

  • @Little-rb6rb

    @Little-rb6rb

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Ruiseal bro you dont understand jack shit about science or the economy

  • @iandavidvillaloboswong5180

    @iandavidvillaloboswong5180

    Жыл бұрын

    It would be too hard and pointless to invade a Mars colony. Even if their home country is destroyed the conqueror would benefit more from keeping them alive than killing them. Maybe replace the workers over time and that would be it. If you want a sci fi scenario play Infinite Warfare lol

  • @Ruiseal

    @Ruiseal

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Little-rb6rb and how is that related for possible uses of a mars colony?

  • @simpleadventureme
    @simpleadventuremeАй бұрын

    I love how you storytel this!

  • @paraceratherium255
    @paraceratherium25525 күн бұрын

    SAMSUNG, WHAT ARE YOU DOING TO SOUTH KOREA!?!? 4:36

  • @dogetaxes8893
    @dogetaxes8893 Жыл бұрын

    Personally think any economic system could really survive the demograpic collapses that countries like China, Japan and SK are facing (a lot of Europe in the near future). I think were gonna see differing levels of bad, but from a fundemental point of view, having a demographic pyramid that's upside down sounds like a death blow for future growth. it's a death spiral (negative feedback loop) where younger generations have to support a larger older generation, hence have a lower standard of living and less kids but because the next generation is even smaller the same pattern keeps repeating until something breaks.

  • @flutterwind7686

    @flutterwind7686

    Жыл бұрын

    Immigration works, but that requires considerable cultural concessions. Something Korea and Japan are very afraid of.

  • @amsd1231

    @amsd1231

    Жыл бұрын

    At the end of the day a country's fortunes change as time goes on. This has always been true of people and in history. Great empires rise and fall. Countries enter a golden age and enter a dark age. It's all a part of history. It's just really gonna suck for the young Koreans who has wealth when they are born but has to go through a steep decline in their lifetime. This is basically the same cliche story of a kid growing up in a wealthy family but as soon as his parents die he finds out that their wealth was all on borrowed money and he is on the hook for paying the creditors. He can declare bankruptcy but it's also gonna suck when he has to apply for a mortgage. BTW this doesn't just apply to Korea but other western countries. They are all consuming more than they produce. It's all gonna catch up to them soon. The only sad part is the overconsumers will die fat and happy whereas their kids will have to suffer the consequences. I only hope that the collapse will happen after I die but it doesn't look my wishes will come true.

  • @genoric4094

    @genoric4094

    Жыл бұрын

    @@flutterwind7686Something that you should be very careful with. From a Swede.

  • @reddevil5543

    @reddevil5543

    Жыл бұрын

    @@flutterwind7686 immigration is only a temporary plaster over much larger issue. Many underdeveloped countries outside of Africa and Middle East are already nearing birth rates of 2.1, eventually these countries themselves will run into problems. Most of South Asia will start loosing people in 25 years, SE Asia maybe 10-15 years, so this is not a good solution long term. Eventually I think humans will need to accept that population can't always keep growing or remain stable, it'll decline once countries develop, and should design their social security structures keeping this in mind. But politicians can't think beyond the next election cycle

  • @AndRei-yc3ti

    @AndRei-yc3ti

    Жыл бұрын

    Its a myth that economic difficulties will lead to fewer kids - in every country that has tried financual incentives to make people have more kids, its failed every time. Its not about finances at all (indeed, this is why poorest countries in the world have many kids with no problems), but rather its about the mindsets women have towrds families and childbirth

  • @LilmeMusic
    @LilmeMusic Жыл бұрын

    Lots of countries about to dive into an economic crash which is a natural consequence of industrializaion. It seems countries just save a bunch of money to prepare for the eventual crash, South Korea has done that decently well

  • @wilderness73
    @wilderness7311 ай бұрын

    Very well put the complicated issues into simple explanations.

  • @MLGDouglas
    @MLGDouglas Жыл бұрын

    I love how ur videos are so educational but have the visuals of a shitpost. I LOVE IT

  • @MaxwellAerialPhotography
    @MaxwellAerialPhotography Жыл бұрын

    A good idea for a video might be to compare and contrast all the countries that are about to go through massive demographic crisises, and both how they got there and how they (plan) are going through it. I’m thinking of namely Russia, Germany, Canada, Japan, China, and South Korea. Maybe also a bit about what sets the select few countries, such as France and the US, that have avoided this trap, apart from the rest.

  • @pottertheavenger1363

    @pottertheavenger1363

    Жыл бұрын

    It would be funny if USA also had an incoming demographic collapse, since they hate migrants and their anchor kids so much, yet they can't be bothered to have white children of their own.

  • @MrMarinus18

    @MrMarinus18

    Жыл бұрын

    France has a birthrate of 1.8 which is higher than the 1.6 of Germany but still below the minimum 2.1. Also despite that it's immigration rate is significantly lower than Germany's.

  • @bevandleon

    @bevandleon

    Жыл бұрын

    Canada is doing much better than France, what are you talking about

  • @ericlee6145

    @ericlee6145

    Жыл бұрын

    The US "avoided" the trap because it has high immigration.

  • @mysterioanonymous3206

    @mysterioanonymous3206

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ericlee6145 this. White Americans have 1.5, asian Americans even less at 1.38... That's lower than even Germany.

  • @ngjiherhn4034
    @ngjiherhn4034 Жыл бұрын

    I'm half offended and half really happy to see my nation looking like a very worried tiger with it's mouth open I'm pretty sure it isn't intentional but it looks really funny xD

  • @LuzikArbuzik77

    @LuzikArbuzik77

    Жыл бұрын

    Tiger is a pretty cool animal to have as symbol. What is more funny for me is that North Korea has this mythological korean flying horse as their symbol, which perfectly fits how pompous their government is and how delusional are their ideas

  • @ngjiherhn4034

    @ngjiherhn4034

    Жыл бұрын

    @@LuzikArbuzik77 to clear things up I'm really happy with the national animal I'm just saying the way it's drawn looks like its open mouthed worried, which is about accurate to be frank

  • @LuzikArbuzik77

    @LuzikArbuzik77

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ngjiherhn4034 haha, yeah, I see. Anyway, I hope your country will find a way out of this mess!

  • @user-hf2dr7sh4y

    @user-hf2dr7sh4y

    Жыл бұрын

    Get used to being offended. In America that's all everyone does. Offend racial groups to make themselves feel better because in the end everyone sucks in their own different of ways. SK is just one part of that in the world and it's really about which way of living sucks less. So if you're rich in SK, you can feel pretty secure and stable in SK as well as almost anywhere in the rest of the world, hence the shotgun on the cliff metaphor about Samsung

  • @joshwon4291

    @joshwon4291

    8 ай бұрын

    @@LuzikArbuzik77 Yes but to be fair, flying horses are pretty fucking cool too.

  • @dabajabaza111
    @dabajabaza111 Жыл бұрын

    I... love this channel. Thanks for keeping it real.

  • @rickwirtz96
    @rickwirtz96Ай бұрын

    2:21 Spot on, i don't know their obsession with USA

  • @juliogarcia9738
    @juliogarcia9738 Жыл бұрын

    11:20 describing demographic collapse of a nation with a BOING sound is exactly what I'm subscribed

  • @OwnD1
    @OwnD1 Жыл бұрын

    Even tho h0ser probz don’t have a PhD, I really like his presentation style lmao. Got its charms

  • @JesperRoos

    @JesperRoos

    Жыл бұрын

    phds are overrated.

  • @perhaps1094

    @perhaps1094

    Жыл бұрын

    Why would he need a PHD??

  • @h0ser

    @h0ser

    Жыл бұрын

    pretty huge di

  • @DeezNutz-em8tr

    @DeezNutz-em8tr

    Жыл бұрын

    @@h0ser based

  • @duffydope

    @duffydope

    Жыл бұрын

    @@h0ser 😂

  • @kzyrt
    @kzyrt4 ай бұрын

    South Korea and Japan is a actually slowly getting together peacefully for different stuff like the Idol industry, Animation industry etc, except for the older generations. Basically everything except the government and the older generation is cool with each other.. lol

  • @korakys
    @korakys5 ай бұрын

    This is the funniest country explainer video I've ever watched and pretty damn accurate too!

  • @meganegan5992
    @meganegan5992 Жыл бұрын

    Funny to consider how S. Korea used such a similar strategy to success as Meiji era Japan's Zaibatsu: give all the money to rich families, and hope that they rise the tides of, if not the people, then at least the state.

  • @axios7603

    @axios7603

    Жыл бұрын

    most dumbest strategy to equality ever

  • @meganegan5992

    @meganegan5992

    Жыл бұрын

    @@axios7603 Well I wouldn't call it dumb. It certainly was effective at generating growth. This kind of strategy is second only to complete central planning in terms of GDP growth, but it causes plenty of problems when it comes to issues such as equality or long term stability. It did exactly what they wanted it to, but as the video shows, that did not come without serious long term cost.

  • @AlohaBiatch

    @AlohaBiatch

    Жыл бұрын

    The difference is that in Japan zaibatsu were dismantled a long time ago and the companies are much more diverse now (for instance a company such as Mitsubishi electric and Mitsubishi motors is completely separately run even though they share a similar name)

  • @cydessaso

    @cydessaso

    Жыл бұрын

    That's where they got the idea from. "Chaebol" is literally the Korean translation of zaibatsu, and the strategy was used on purpose by the state to grow the economy at the expense of the people. They pretty much copy and pasted the same tactics Japan used both in Meiji period and in the postwar period (1948-1970s)

  • @AlohaBiatch

    @AlohaBiatch

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cydessaso that is true except that the US military dismantled the zaibatsu system when they made japan capitulate in 1945. Of course they were not 100% successful, but the zaibatsu system in Japan is much weaker than chaebols in Korea now and the corporate world is much more diverse with different companies.

  • @kattapp
    @kattapp Жыл бұрын

    It was so right until you thought that we wouldn’t defend Korea. We are steadily moving toward Asia and away from Europe overall. The main focus is Taiwan but SK is still a priority. Ukraine has brought attention back to the Russian front but the military reforms are pointing toward a pacific campaign.

  • @Somebodyherefornow

    @Somebodyherefornow

    Жыл бұрын

    especially since china may be collapsing in the near future

  • @Serching4JerryGarcia

    @Serching4JerryGarcia

    Жыл бұрын

    Yup. The U.S. and Japan are also increasing their collaborations with their militaries.

  • @zandaroos553

    @zandaroos553

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed, and it should be noted we’re not moving away from Europe per se, just allowing France and Germany to take the more leading role on the continent while we fill in their deficits in the East where Washington is more respected than Brussels. But America’s closest modern allies are in the East - Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Australia (hopefully Vietnam soon) are all critical partners in America’s larger geostrategic gameplan

  • @Cecilia-ky3uw

    @Cecilia-ky3uw

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Serching4JerryGarcia Yes, but mainly only the U.S. and Japan, Japan has got some really amazing people who managed to deal with both the Dems and the Reps.

  • @mshin291

    @mshin291

    Жыл бұрын

    "Asia" is a large place. In the long run US will find it very difficult(not impossible, but still) to defend all of its focus points in the region. And let's be honest, SK is kind of low when it comes in US priority within Asia : their strategic/diplomatic/symbolic importance lacks when compared to Japan, Taiwan, Singapore, India, Vietnam, Aus/NZ (not really 'Asia' but still well within the theatre). Also the US also has to keep its influence in Europe and the Americas as well, so SK is fairly low on the priorities list. If things get sour SK is probably one of the first for the US to withdraw from in order to cut losses and/or focus on a more effective strategic point. This is made even more evident by the fact that South Korea is pretty much helpless even if the US decides to completely neglect it - no way for SK to bite back by joining China or something due to its insane level of Sinophobia.

  • @AverageSensei
    @AverageSensei26 күн бұрын

    The Japanese when you ask them what happened on October 2nd 1920: 🥺 China when you ask them what happened on June 4th 1989: 🥺

  • @commmoc

    @commmoc

    11 күн бұрын

    1997年11月21日☺

  • @fwoop4848
    @fwoop4848Ай бұрын

    Funny asf and also informative, love this format

  • @reversevision7564
    @reversevision7564 Жыл бұрын

    korea has one of the saddest history I have ever heard. In the last century alone they suffered almost half a century of occupation and soon after that a devastating war that left a land completely desolated. Today this country is one of the world's top 10 economies and a full democracy. If they have managed to get to this point, it means they are a great people. I bet on them that they will overcome through this as well

  • @bae2646

    @bae2646

    Жыл бұрын

    Someone should tell this Korean that everyone knows you are Korean😂

  • @rodrigoe.gordillo2617

    @rodrigoe.gordillo2617

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bae2646 hh

  • @jimmyha1898

    @jimmyha1898

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bae2646 Why? Just curious. Your comment seems to have nothing to do with anything so I am wondering why you said it lol

  • @nothinglastsforever0000

    @nothinglastsforever0000

    Жыл бұрын

    I’m Korean but I know for a fact that Korea doesn’t have the saddest history on Earth.

  • @naughtyknight7384

    @naughtyknight7384

    Жыл бұрын

    Cause US and Japan😡😡

  • @kuroazrem5376
    @kuroazrem5376 Жыл бұрын

    Another crisis in Korea is that their population is also leaving due to the horrible conditions in the country.

  • @monkeyhero479

    @monkeyhero479

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed, I lived in Korea for a bit, and out of the Koreans I met there, more than half have moved to other Western countries e.g. US, Canada. Granted maybe that's a biased sample because the people I met knew enough English to be able to land somewhere else and survive, but still it's pretty wild that I can visit S. Korea and not see all my Korean friends on my trip.

  • @duckiechen1321

    @duckiechen1321

    Жыл бұрын

    @@monkeyhero479 I don't doubt that the majority of people who have the time and money and opportunity would happily leave the country.

  • @theklisha
    @theklisha29 күн бұрын

    “Sponsored by: North Korea!”

  • @apachinook6475
    @apachinook64756 ай бұрын

    1 year passed after this video had been uploaded. Things have gotten worse and almost EVERYONE knows it's miserable in Korea. Birth Rate has steadily been decreasing and people began to realise how severe it is now but they still have little idea about how to stop the fall. The worse is that still massive people are flooding in from other province to Seoul Area, even though the fact that already more than half the population are living in Greater Seoul, where the area is only 12% the nation. At the same time, other cities including Busan, the 2nd largest city, are dying and many people are leaving their home town till this day. However, with improper and endless competetions in overpopulated Greater Seoul, they commonly fail to find happiness, making birth rate to be less than 0.6 there now. I think foreigners wouldn't know how desperate Koreans feel now but I'm glad there're more people going to be aware.

  • @dylanpark9700
    @dylanpark9700 Жыл бұрын

    I know some of the guys from South Korea in their late 20s who got their citizenship in US, and they said they're really lucky to have "escaped" from SK. And I thought the term escape would be apply to North Korea

  • @liben5052

    @liben5052

    Жыл бұрын

    Theres a phrase I heard "Asia is heaven for spending money, hell for making money"

  • @jo-shi8759

    @jo-shi8759

    Жыл бұрын

    @@liben5052 as an American that moved to Asia for a decade, this statement is too true. Vacationing there you will live like a king. Actually living there and experiencing life as a local and making local money is a whoooole different breed lol Unless you're an expat or already have an existing business or already come from money, or retired living off fat retirement funds given you've been fiscally responsible your whole life. Then you'll be just fine

  • @-SP.

    @-SP.

    Жыл бұрын

    @@liben5052 Depends. Japan's GDP per capita isn't much lower than the US, but their cost of living is significantly lower

  • @user-dh3bv1dl4t

    @user-dh3bv1dl4t

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jo-shi8759 Concluding Asia into a same group is weird. Asian is really diversed. We don't even have same political ideology, culture and the economy is really different.

  • @jo-shi8759

    @jo-shi8759

    Жыл бұрын

    @@user-dh3bv1dl4t Yes I understand Asia is diverse, but things are usually similar since they are in the same region.. Just like US/UK/Canada/Australia/NZ etc have similar thinkings with minor differences

  • @austinoz10
    @austinoz10 Жыл бұрын

    Hoser finally securing that bag 😤

  • @neonsamurai4604
    @neonsamurai4604 Жыл бұрын

    mic and editing has gotten so much better since i started watching during the pandemic. proud of you h0ser!

  • @zealousgiraffe1010

    @zealousgiraffe1010

    2 ай бұрын

    pfp checks out

  • @jujuoof174
    @jujuoof1743 ай бұрын

    I learned so much with only two videos, thanks!

  • @shedar7678
    @shedar7678 Жыл бұрын

    Basically both Koreas are dystopias. The North is 1984 and the south is blade runner

  • @LuzikArbuzik77

    @LuzikArbuzik77

    Жыл бұрын

    Still prefer the blade runner tbh

  • @Gigi-zr6hp

    @Gigi-zr6hp

    Жыл бұрын

    @@LuzikArbuzik77 lmao being a corpo bootlicker isn't better than being a commie shill

  • @LuzikArbuzik77

    @LuzikArbuzik77

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Gigi-zr6hp have fun living in North Korea, coping is welcome there

  • @shedar7678

    @shedar7678

    Жыл бұрын

    @@LuzikArbuzik77 I think we all do

  • @shedar7678

    @shedar7678

    Жыл бұрын

    @@LuzikArbuzik77 you're the one taking too seriously a joke bro

  • @DaTSloTH1
    @DaTSloTH1 Жыл бұрын

    This is the best use of infographics I have ever seen in a long time.... I was never caught off track or uninterested (other than the ad, I just don't like any ads) in the video. Instant sub, and now a major source of news. I love it, h0ser!

  • @Y-2009
    @Y-2009Ай бұрын

    bro forgot Red velvet even went to North Korea 😭😭😭

  • @mrwednesday2501
    @mrwednesday2501 Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely hilarious while still being very informative and interesting 😩👍