How Expensive Is Life in Korea? | Street Interview

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  • čas přidán 4. 06. 2024
  • The views expressed in this video do not represent that of Asian Boss or the general Korean public.
    We all know that living costs are rising worldwide due to inflation, and it can be a challenge. However, imagine living in a city where the cost of living is already quite high. Seoul is known to be one of the top 5 most expensive cities in Asia. But how expensive is it really to live there and how much do people earn to sustain their living costs? We hit the streets of Seoul to find out.
    0:00 - Intro
    0:43 - What’s your monthly income?
    1:47 - How much does a house in Seoul cost?
    4:34 - Examples of price increase
    7:20 - Ideal salary to live comfortably
    8:48 - How worried are you about the rising cost of living in Korea?
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Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @AsianBoss
    @AsianBoss  Před 5 měsíci +2

    To understand why we do street interview like this, check out this message video: czcams.com/video/7ukfLMmI8XY/video.html

  • @AP81191
    @AP81191 Před 11 měsíci +590

    Survival cost is so high these days , forget about wealth creation, I will be grateful if I could save enough for my old age.

    • @TrinhNguyen-sh4fj
      @TrinhNguyen-sh4fj Před 11 měsíci +3

      Exactly!

    • @NatsuHoshiyomi
      @NatsuHoshiyomi Před 11 měsíci +7

      Relatable!

    • @chinavirus841
      @chinavirus841 Před 11 měsíci

      Blame South Korea, they caused this mess

    • @AngelaSealana
      @AngelaSealana Před 11 měsíci +14

      I think about this a lot. But we'll also be lucky if the earth is still livable by the time we're old.

    • @dachosenone207
      @dachosenone207 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Nowadays we can't dream big. So we send on the short term. Like the girl said it's impossible to buy a house here

  • @sunjingles7829
    @sunjingles7829 Před 11 měsíci +1446

    I lived in Korea for a couple of months, and yes it is true that many things are expensive in the country, but many Korean people are obsessed with luxury. I had the opportunity to hang out with Koreans who complained about inflation, salaries, and house prices. Still, they spent a lot of their money on eating out in fancy, trendy places, buying expensive clothes, and keeping that lifestyle even if there were less costly options, no wonder they couldn't save money.

    • @testtestsson4927
      @testtestsson4927 Před 11 měsíci

      Yeah South Koreans seems like extremely shallow people, perhaps the most shallow of all peoples. Surgeries to enhance appearance is normal.

    • @moshiacid6673
      @moshiacid6673 Před 11 měsíci +240

      Since they're aware that they cannot afford a house. They'd rather spend savings on luxury items they otherwise will never buy. I don't think that's a difficult concept to grasp.

    • @manonn2006
      @manonn2006 Před 11 měsíci +308

      @@moshiacid6673I don’t think you understand how bad it can get though. We’re talking people sometimes getting loans to buy something they obviously don’t need. It’s not rational to buy an expensive bag and then complain that you don’t have enough to eat properly. The convo is quite nuanced…

    • @user-fz6hz3uc9x
      @user-fz6hz3uc9x Před 11 měsíci +95

      럭셔리에 집착하는 사람들이 있는 반면 엄청난 절약으로 재테크 돈을 모으는 젊은 사람들도 있습니다. 투자에 대한 공부도 많이 합니다.

    • @manonn2006
      @manonn2006 Před 11 měsíci +12

      @@user-fz6hz3uc9x 님의 의견에 동의해서 맨 마지막에 "this convo is quite nuanced"라고 썼습니다

  • @ttoja1267
    @ttoja1267 Před 11 měsíci +403

    Korea's economic growth was very fast, so many people in their 50s and older now bought houses in Seoul at relatively low prices. Parents' generation could buy houses like this Therefore, young people now want to buy houses and Korea likes houses because stocks and other assets are small

    • @mandy11254
      @mandy11254 Před 11 měsíci +22

      And it'll get tougher bc there's only so much landmass available.

    • @Vendrix86
      @Vendrix86 Před 11 měsíci +69

      Out of touch old people think like this everywhere. Costs were so much cheaper back then. Life was harder physically for sure but it was a real goal to work hard and eventually be able to buy a house. Today you can work hard your entire life and still not have enough.

    • @user-nh8uw4rq4o
      @user-nh8uw4rq4o Před 11 měsíci +8

      So, Generation conflict is a big issue in Korea.

    • @Flatcetera
      @Flatcetera Před 11 měsíci +28

      @@SL-jn8cz the question is, is there work outside of urban areas? Specially well paying jobs. There’s a reason ghost towns are surging everywhere(that includes the western world, but Korea and Japan are even more poignant examples, as their population sizes have always been small because of territory).
      It’s easy to say houses outside big urban centers are cheaper when you already made it and can easily commute from job to residence. I’m sure many dormitory cities exist around Seoul, but it’s not the girl working in food service that’s gonna be able to live in such places. Low paying job workers still need to essentially live near where they work or take grueling commute to said low paying job, all of that drains resources that could otherwise go towards a future residence.

    • @iamnemoo
      @iamnemoo Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@SL-jn8cz There's no work out there, people don't want to commute over an hour, not many hagwon options & etc if you have kids, and so on. If you're childfree and work online, then yea, you can save and live well out there.. and some do do that.

  • @kurarisusa
    @kurarisusa Před 11 měsíci +381

    I also want to comment on what the guy said at the end. In many ways he's right. It's true that in his time the poor were A LOT worse off than people who are poor today. But also keep in mind that back then the poor didn't have television, internet and smart phones that rubbed their poverty in their faces 24/7. It's been shown that humans are happier with less if everyone they see around them has relatively the same amount. But thanks to technology, nowdays many are seeing people with 5 to 10 times their wealth paraded on their screens all of the time. Of course they're going to feel hurt and dissatisfied. Of course they're going to feel left behind, and less happy (even if they technically have more food and resources than the poor of previous generations). I'm not sure the solution to this. I'm just pointing out that it's an issue I think gets forgotten in the discussion.

    • @breakaway2x
      @breakaway2x Před 10 měsíci

      Korean TV is awful...it's 90% just filled with young beautiful rich people .....while they ignore the majority of korean population who are old, middle to low income living just normal average lives.

    • @garesonc9672
      @garesonc9672 Před 10 měsíci +13

      The saying "work more or desire less" fits here...

    • @linooliva3965
      @linooliva3965 Před 10 měsíci +7

      @@garesonc9672brother I’ve been living in that motto and to be honest it’s easy when you’re single I’m a guy for reference it’s hard in a relationship .

    • @garesonc9672
      @garesonc9672 Před 10 měsíci +4

      @@linooliva3965 I've been married 30 years and we have three sons...it still applies to me, applies to them...and will still be true in the future.

    • @linooliva3965
      @linooliva3965 Před 10 měsíci +6

      I wonder at what point people really just start seeing people as people nothing more nothing less

  • @rigelr5345
    @rigelr5345 Před 11 měsíci +470

    In Denmark, grocery items rose like 50-100% in price and the stores all blamed COVID and corn/grain crisis due to Ukraine war, but now that both COVID is over and the corn/grain solved, prices has not gone down again like in other countries, and we're all really angry at the grocery stores for taking advantage of the world situation like that. Some people can't afford to buy essentials like...

    • @stoneone1479
      @stoneone1479 Před 11 měsíci

      You voted for those idiots. They wanted to have you commit suicide for their war of avarice against Russia. Now they want to kill all your cows. You in Europe will be forced to eat bugs by the end of this decade.

    • @ucchau173
      @ucchau173 Před 11 měsíci +60

      Which country the prices have gone down ?? 😂😂😂 There no country the prices is down it just growth slower 😂😂😂

    • @DreamCatcher-wg1bk
      @DreamCatcher-wg1bk Před 11 měsíci +28

      I thought it is happening only in my country😅. During covid they reduce the number of people to be seated in long distance sharing taxi and increased the price, which was justified. But now covid is over and the passanger seating has gone beck to full pre-covid seating but price has not come down.

    • @hollywebster6844
      @hollywebster6844 Před 11 měsíci +21

      Prices certainly have not gone down in the US!

    • @rigelr5345
      @rigelr5345 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@ucchau173 Apparently some other countries in Europe, the prices went down a bit again I heard. Maybe it's not true. Either way it's ridiculous

  • @GreenWaifu
    @GreenWaifu Před 11 měsíci +280

    As a young adult myself, I felt a deep connection with the individuals you interviewed and their struggles with the increasing costs of living.
    It's thought-provoking to see the impact of inflation on the daily lives of young Koreans. It raises questions about the broader economic landscape, income disparity, and the challenges faced by the younger generation striving for a secure and fulfilling future.

    • @mguendumiguel9523
      @mguendumiguel9523 Před 11 měsíci +5

      in mexico the inflation is going down ...the korean people need to learn spanish

    • @anonnnymousthegreat
      @anonnnymousthegreat Před 11 měsíci

      Well inflation is happening all around the globe. And the war between russia and ukraine is to thank for that.

    • @dolinaj1
      @dolinaj1 Před 11 měsíci

      Thoughtful comment, GreenWaifu. Corporate profiteering, while paying little or no tax, burdens the 99%.

    • @garesonc9672
      @garesonc9672 Před 10 měsíci +1

      I'd suggest you pay more attention the man in his 50's....sounds like you need his perspective not that of peers.

    • @GreenWaifu
      @GreenWaifu Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@garesonc9672 Thank you for your input and perspective. While the man in his 50s certainly has valuable life experience, it's crucial to acknowledge that the challenges faced by young people today are unique to our current time. By understanding the struggles of the younger generation, we can work towards addressing their needs and shaping a better future for all.
      It's essential to have a diverse range of perspectives to gain a comprehensive understanding of the issues at hand. By listening to the voices of young people, we can bridge generational gaps, foster empathy, and collectively work towards meaningful solutions.

  • @humanbeing8948
    @humanbeing8948 Před 11 měsíci +116

    The concept of work hard and you wont be poor is deeply flawed. If the government says that 71,419,751KRW is a poverty yearly salary for example, and companies refuse to pay more, the fault is with employers. You can't save your way out of poverty while considering all the other cost of living factors without having to work more than 1 job.

    • @kyh6767
      @kyh6767 Před 11 měsíci +5

      Lol were did u get that number. That numbr itself is already like the top 7~8%of earners

  • @cloudyboyy8549
    @cloudyboyy8549 Před 11 měsíci +83

    For young generation everywhere, we are so screwed. It is getting so difficult even just to survive within our own means

    • @jugramhaschwalth4846
      @jugramhaschwalth4846 Před 11 měsíci +2

      no.

    • @synthraofficial5366
      @synthraofficial5366 Před 11 měsíci +4

      ​@@jugramhaschwalth4846Yes.

    • @garesonc9672
      @garesonc9672 Před 10 měsíci +8

      Your generation's perspective is skewed by entitlement and idleness. You look at older people and assume it was given to them. My wife and I ate frozen dinners and packaged Ramen noodles in our two bedroom apartment when were first married. Now we have a nice home and three sons...two of which are successful adults likely in your age group. It wasn't magic...it was years of work, perseverance and living within our means. You only see the end result...not the toil.

    • @dwade3202
      @dwade3202 Před 10 měsíci +9

      ​@@garesonc9672so because you suffered, everyone else has to as well ? wonderful thinking, really empathetic . wanting to live life while working 40+ hours a week and not just to scrape by isn't entitlement, its common sense. but for people who only see success through their job and not being a good human being is hard to explain.

    • @Gattberserk
      @Gattberserk Před 3 měsíci

      @@jugramhaschwalth4846 dun change the narrative, the answer is YES.

  • @nicechoices2955
    @nicechoices2955 Před 11 měsíci +70

    If maybe some big companies relocate their businesses in some rural areas,where they can provide sustainable housing for their employees. Maybe lives can change. Being flocked into urban places is unhealthy in every aspects

    • @bellyrubs
      @bellyrubs Před 11 měsíci +9

      If only they won't destroy the nature even more 🥲

    • @earlysda
      @earlysda Před 11 měsíci

      nice, your commen is very true.

    • @DefBroadcasting
      @DefBroadcasting Před 11 měsíci +7

      Bingo. The government should move facilities to daegu, and the president should live in Busan. Hello, make the legislature move to Daejeon. Spread out.

    • @malvinelpinnoy
      @malvinelpinnoy Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@DefBroadcasting is that a joke? 😅

  • @thanGacao
    @thanGacao Před 11 měsíci +153

    as someone who's from the Netherlands and who lives in Korea, apartment prices are crazy. For a decent place of 84m2, which is still considered small in my country (although you get 2 bathrooms here haha), where I live it starts at 1 million USD

    • @mandy11254
      @mandy11254 Před 11 měsíci

      You get most of it back when you leave tho right? Heard they're slowly incorporating a rent system but not sure. Or do you mean you bought the place?

    • @thanGacao
      @thanGacao Před 11 měsíci +17

      @@mandy11254 that is when you want to "lease" it, the jeonsae system. For a million dollar apartment then the jeonsae would most likely be around 6-700.000 USD and yes you get that back in full. But if you want to actually buy it starts at 1 million USD, at least the area where I live.

    • @thanGacao
      @thanGacao Před 11 měsíci +11

      @@mandy11254 the problem with Jeonsae is that, although it sounds okay on paper, after 2 years you either have to find a new place or you can extend your lease, but the homeowner is allowed to raise the jeonsae by 4-5%? (dont quote me on that) so basically in those 2 years you're working to save up for that raise in jeonsae.

    • @sarahsseoulsearch
      @sarahsseoulsearch Před 11 měsíci +12

      ​@@mandy11254 Also, jeonse is not guaranteed to be fully insured. If the landlord dies or flees the country or something you are not guaranteed to get any of the rest back

    • @mandy11254
      @mandy11254 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@thanGacao The raise honestly doesn't seem that bad if you're getting all or most back anyways since you add a small portion more to extend. I honestly thought the issue (not too sure) was that paying the jeonsae initially was extremely difficult for many people bc it's usually a large sum of money if I'm right. According to my parents jeonsae is usually 50% of the total price of that apartment room, so in your case jeonsae would be like $500,000. Looks like for Seoul this goes up to 70~80% according to the user below. In either case, it's pretty extreme if you don't have the money, which most people won't have. For those with the money tho, it's prob the best system they can ask for since you don't waste money on a monthly rent. They are incorporating some rent system as well so not sure what the future will hold.

  • @hwanohchung
    @hwanohchung Před 11 měsíci +39

    2:57 Hey Asian Boss, you need a subtitle correction regarding the unit of Pyeong to Square foot. 1 Pyeong is 3.3 square meters and 1 square meter is 10.764 square feet. So 1 Pyeng is about 35 square feet. So, when the gentleman said 25 Pyeong it is about 900 square ft, not 36.

    • @Poetic_Justice_YC
      @Poetic_Justice_YC Před 10 měsíci

      Just googled Pyeong, I think by sq ft they mean “Korean sq ft”. So 1 Pyeong = 36 square Korean ft.

    • @thomgizziz
      @thomgizziz Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@Poetic_Justice_YC There is no such thing as a korean square foot... I was right you went to korea for 2 weeks and now you feel you are an expert. SMH
      They screwed up in the video. You cant just start making up measurements that dont exist because your feelings are that the video should be correct. A square foot is a square foot a 평 is a 평. Stop being the guy that goes to a country and next thing you know they think they are a lost soul from that country and know everything about it.

  • @musicbkim
    @musicbkim Před 11 měsíci +69

    There are plenty of nice place that are much more affordable once you get out of the CBD areas or what may be considered "cool" areas of Seoul, and even more so once you get further away from Seoul all together. You may have to commute to CBD area (probably by subway), if you work in it. The cost of living is much cheaper, and it's quieter, and less crowded, once you get out of the center of Seoul. You just have to be willing to live in an area that is not considered cool or as an educational hub.

    • @TrinhNguyen-sh4fj
      @TrinhNguyen-sh4fj Před 11 měsíci +10

      So true and it is like that in the US too. I live in the SF Bay Area and certain cities and areas are more expensive, but once you leave those expensive areas, things get a lot cheaper.

    • @ne_alexa
      @ne_alexa Před 11 měsíci +11

      It is good to live in a small city with a salary of a big city. The problem is that usually people don't have it. This is the reason why lots of young people move to big cities.

    • @Laura-Yu
      @Laura-Yu Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@TrinhNguyen-sh4fj Sadly the US have less public transportation than South Korea

    • @tatututuuu3515
      @tatututuuu3515 Před 10 měsíci +5

      I would rather live in a more expensive area than in a cheaper one if my work is in the city. The commute is brutal and as someone that already did that for years i can say it is definitely not the solution.

  • @Enchanteralle
    @Enchanteralle Před 10 měsíci +67

    It's definitely tough for the young generation. It's hard to stay motivated for some who earn enough to get by...it's like being in an endless cycle of working just to pay bills. If a house can cost $2 million and above, I don't know how any single person working hard can save up enough to even get that started. This is happening to so many countries around the world.

  • @Fralche
    @Fralche Před 11 měsíci +156

    Honestly I agree with the older man that people have to keep maintaining effort to go by. However, situation has slightly changed. For an equivalent salary (even when taking into account inflation etc) it is impossible to buy an appartment etc for the same "price" as before. Also the issue is that there are a lot more monopoles than before + heritage. If you dont get a good start in life it is actually difficult to improve nowadays. This is what happens when just a few people possess everything.
    Also urbanization:/
    (I want to add that I am not complaining and that I am very grateful/respectful for what elders did. It wasn't easy for them. Even my father had a life that I would consider way harder than mine)

    • @marg8315
      @marg8315 Před 11 měsíci +38

      he spoke like a true boomer tbh. he has enjoyed the economic boom as Korea's economy took off. However, as in any capitalist society, assets appreciate faster than wages and wages become stagnant once the country's economy reaches a certain level. So while it may have worked for him while he bought his fancy apartment in Gangnam for only 300k while he was making 100k a year, people can't possibly afford the same apartment now worth 3 mil making 150k doing what he used to do. The same success formula is not gonna work for millennial and gen z.

    • @theMyouknow
      @theMyouknow Před 10 měsíci +1

      There were more opportunities during the old mans era, the war had probably ended etc, everything was much much cheaper less people etc, today its harder both social pressure and expectations like never before, people want to hire you as cheap as possible but the workload is for two people.

    • @garesonc9672
      @garesonc9672 Před 10 měsíci +3

      "If you dont get a good start in life it is actually difficult to improve nowadays"....he literally established that he was poor when he was younger. So much for you 'good start' theory.

    • @Fralche
      @Fralche Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@garesonc9672 ? I said nowadays (I was not talking about him, read again)
      And it is well documented. At least in Europe. Maybe it is not exactly the same in Korea I agree that I should have check. But I think it s similar.
      And I am not saying it is impossible. Our generation just have other challenges

    • @theMyouknow
      @theMyouknow Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@0xyGen_2.p0 It aint the same, Less people more buildings = much cheaper to buy a house even where I come from people could buy a whole house 200k and salaries and taxes was much lower so it was easier to accumulate that sum of money, you had more chances of getting a job because everyone was building creating companies and stores, everything is already built today and you gotto compete with everyone to get a job, back in the days there was no waiting no degrees, if you were hungry enough you had a decent job. Just look at the T-Ford factory in the US they built a whole city around it more or less, but Detroit without those factories which kept it alive made it to what it is today, no opportunities = poverty and decay.

  • @jdassonval
    @jdassonval Před 11 měsíci +69

    I live in Paris, France and it's the same problem. Inflation hits very hard big cities and when you live in countryside, your salary is often not enough to live correctly. This world goes mad everywhere.

    • @0o0_en
      @0o0_en Před 11 měsíci +7

      Same with me. Everywhere, it's the same problems with the economy.

    • @beot-kkot
      @beot-kkot Před 11 měsíci +1

      Thank you. Some people are living in a bubble and think Korea is the worst. It’s actually not the case. Cheers!

    • @Fralche
      @Fralche Před 11 měsíci +1

      ​@@beot-kkot Well Korea is not worse for sure. But there are just places that are more or less suffering because of inflation. Being a French living in Korea I d say that since average salary is higher in France my friends are less annoyed by prices going up than my korean friends. Less preoccupied I d say. But in my case I d say it is probably similar.
      However I m just impressed how it can be hard to raise kids in this economy

    • @beot-kkot
      @beot-kkot Před 11 měsíci

      @@Fralche it’s all relative. Raising a child is a big expense almost anywhere in the world, but Korean families have some advantages:
      1. Unlike many European countries, most Korean grandparents take care of their grandchildren, which means free childcare (and peace of mind). 2. Thanks to universal healthcare, having a child in Korea doesn’t leave you with a hefty bill, like it happens in the USA. 3. Postpartum support for baby and mom is a thing in Korea: it’s affordable and available, either at home, or in postpartum centers.
      On the other hand, only 1 in 4 Korean mothers breastfeed their children: baby formula adds up to their expenses, while breast milk is free. Unless you have no milk at all, opting for the most natural option would be a way to save money. Another thing that I have noticed is the amount of gizmos and gadgets that Korean babies “need”. There is no way a newborn needs 50 books and 20 games.
      Once the children reach school age, they are enrolled in endless extracurricular activities and lessons, which are expensive, too. I understand that every parent wants the best for their child, but children should be allowed to be children and play freely. Honestly, I don’t know how effective English hagwon are, since few Koreans can speak English, as compared to other non-English speaking countries.
      It’s not my place to tell people how to raise their child, nor how to live their lives, but maths don’t lie: if you spend more money than you make, it will never be “enough”, no matter how much you earn.

    • @Fralche
      @Fralche Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@beot-kkot Yeah I heard about the post partum from one friend that gave birth! That looks quite good.
      For the grandparents thing, it does exist in France but yeah with the city life it s not very often. I think it will become same with time unfortunately. I also think it s a good thing to have grandparents taking care of children.
      I think Korean education is very VERY GOOD.
      But when I compare the amount my friends had to pay VS the amount my French friends and I had to pay... it s way more than times 3. And I didnt do the cheapest education either. (From elementary school to university-scientific courses).

  • @mashitta5969
    @mashitta5969 Před 11 měsíci +218

    Seoul itself is extremely expensive but if you go live in the rural areas in Korea, the price of housing is quite affordable.

    • @user-fz6hz3uc9x
      @user-fz6hz3uc9x Před 11 měsíci +49

      Near Seoul is also much cheaper. The place they said is the center of Seoul

    • @deyoungyoung3059
      @deyoungyoung3059 Před 11 měsíci +59

      That’s everywhere. Usually rural areas are cheaper than urban areas

    • @TrinhNguyen-sh4fj
      @TrinhNguyen-sh4fj Před 11 měsíci +16

      @@deyoungyoung3059Yup that is how it is worldwide.

    • @stoneone1479
      @stoneone1479 Před 11 měsíci

      If only this generator idiots understood that.

    • @Dominus_Potatus
      @Dominus_Potatus Před 11 měsíci +48

      it is always cheaper on rural areas.
      The problem? You get less income in rural areas, basically you spent the same amount of percentage of your income relative to your expense.
      an example:
      in a city, you get $2000, you spent a glass of coffee for $5
      in a rural area, you get $500, you spent a glass of coffee for $1.25

  • @khadijah3519
    @khadijah3519 Před 11 měsíci +5

    Very informative!! Great piece, Thanks☺️

  • @clownfish7776
    @clownfish7776 Před 11 měsíci +27

    Polular places in Seouls is quite expensive, however, if you are willing to venture out of Seoul area, perhaps in rural areas such as the bordering villages near North Korea, homes can become quite affordable.

    • @user-hk2te2vs6g
      @user-hk2te2vs6g Před 11 měsíci +5

      대신 일자리를 찾기 힘들죠

    • @malvinelpinnoy
      @malvinelpinnoy Před 8 měsíci +1

      Young people prefer the big city life to village living, plus in the big cities is where big companies and major govt/economy facilities are centralized. The Korean govt will have to spread out facilities and get companies like LG and Samsung to invest in remote areas, it'd create more jobs and uncrowd places like Seoul

  • @mandy11254
    @mandy11254 Před 11 měsíci +36

    8 pyeong is not 36 square feet nor is it 36 square meter. It's around 26.4 square meter or 284 square feet. How do you not convert this properly when the whole vid is about prices XD. It'll prob get harder and harder in the future because Korea's already so small and almost everything is concentrated around Seoul. Really hope the other cities see some more growth as well.

    • @stoneone1479
      @stoneone1479 Před 11 měsíci

      Don't you get it? This entire generation isn't procreating. There will be much less people in a generation and maybe that generation won't be useless like yours.

  • @Josh-ge1cr
    @Josh-ge1cr Před 11 měsíci +24

    It's an unfortunate global event now. I remember making around 1400 USD / month and I always thought making at least 100k would do my quite well, but now that I am here, making a bit over that, saving for a house, paying into retirement, and paying all your bills (student loan, rent, etc) the money does not go very far. 100k in 2023 is literally making 75k in 2011 and at this rate, one would need to make 200k-250k to even be able to afford a house.

    • @BlackHoleSpain
      @BlackHoleSpain Před 11 měsíci +1

      Here in Spain average salary for blue-collar jobs is still 18k, while white-collar jobs struggle to get over 29k. However, it's very easy to get out of the market because of the huge ageism.
      I used to be an IT Systems & Networking administrator, and my biggest salary was 24k when I was 35. Got fired in 2007, just before the 2008-2015 Global Financial Crisis, and this is my 16th year being unemployed. Haven't got a single job interview after applying to 800+ offers in all these years. 😕
      Hint: the Prime Minister salary is 88k 😰

    • @dwade3202
      @dwade3202 Před 10 měsíci

      Its not an "unfortunate event" lol its the greed that was unleashed during the last 3 years

    • @triotams
      @triotams Před 8 měsíci

      @@dwade3202 You are correct! To add, the greed though............ started long before the pandemic.

  • @seanoceallachain
    @seanoceallachain Před 11 měsíci +67

    Good work. Korea is gettin very expensive these days, I see the prices of potatoes even gone up by 50-100% in the past 2 years.
    Any meat is also crazy expensive.
    The old man living in Gangnam is very articulate, but he would be in the 1% in Korea, most business people in Gangnam would (it's pretty much the richest area in all Korea). If you're living comfortably there you're living a different life to the average Korean. He should also be at retirement age, but most people in Korea can't. Asian Boss REALLY needs to do an interview with Construction Workers. They're all 50-60+ . Noone wants to do that work anymore and it doesn't pay well enough, yet it's sorely needed in Korea.
    I think that many will see the salaries quoted, like $3,000 a month etc, and think oh, that's quite low, but that's actually a decent paying job in Korea. The average salary for the average worker is not that high. A new incoming teacher will be offered $2,000 - $2,500 . Then you need to see the house prices which are just impossible to afford as mentioned. They're not houses either. It's an 2-3 room standard apartment, no garden etc. You're looking at $700k - 3 million. The further you go outside of Seoul, the cheaper it gets.
    There are 20 million people in the greater Seoul/Gyeongi area, so there are always enough cheap workers to fill most positions.

    • @nathancasey7712
      @nathancasey7712 Před 11 měsíci +1

      yeah its crazy how expensive seoul is yet their wages are way worse than americas. In the US you can not go to college, not graduate highschool and still make 3-4k a month

    • @mandy11254
      @mandy11254 Před 11 měsíci +6

      @@nathancasey7712 Tbf the US is quite literally one of the best places to live for normal people besides their gun and insurance issues. Korea's wages are actually not that bad compared to other big nations like JP and China as well solely based on minimum wage. At the very least, according to a 50 yr old Korean guy I know who recently went back to Korea and works at a Samsung factory, makes $5k (up to $8k if he chooses overttime), along with a dorm that he doesn't pay for. He doesn't hold a special position and this benefit applies to most workers. Ofc it's prob diff because Samsung is HUGE but this is just from someone I know and I believe I read minimum wage is rising in SK.

    • @user-fz6hz3uc9x
      @user-fz6hz3uc9x Před 11 měsíci +3

      ​@@nathancasey7712Prices are much cheaper in Seoul than in New York la. Four dollars for a cup of coffee. Ten dollars for a meal

    • @user-fz6hz3uc9x
      @user-fz6hz3uc9x Před 11 měsíci +2

      ​@@nathancasey7712The studio rental fee is also less than $600, which is expensive in the center of Seoul.

    • @mandy11254
      @mandy11254 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@nathancasey7712 And like the other user said, prices are indeed cheaper and it's not rlly accurate to base wages off of conversion to USD.

  • @maman89
    @maman89 Před 10 měsíci +5

    Its disheartening yet a little bit comforting to see/listen everybody everywhere practically going through the same thing.

  • @mutti411
    @mutti411 Před 11 měsíci +94

    $740,000 for 36 sq feet is straight up robbery, smh. But I'm in the bay area and it's more or less the same, probably even worse. I'll never be able to buy a house either. 😭

    • @FloridaMan69.
      @FloridaMan69. Před 11 měsíci +2

      you can in some state like Mississippi or Alabama

    • @xnicolo
      @xnicolo Před 11 měsíci +52

      I think they made a mistake. They mean square METERS and not feet.

    • @angrybear888
      @angrybear888 Před 11 měsíci +5

      asian boss should do an interview here lol, eating out in sf bay area is WAYYY more expensive than seoul.

    • @andrewhkim
      @andrewhkim Před 11 měsíci +33

      They did make a typo. 1 pyeong = 36 sq ft. They forgot to multiply by 8 pyeong (approx 285 sq ft)...still straight up robbery.

    • @mandy11254
      @mandy11254 Před 11 měsíci +13

      I dont think you have any idea what 36 sq feet is bc neither the bay area nor Korea has prices like this... Btw the translation was wrong. They meant 284 square feet.

  • @anonymuser8662
    @anonymuser8662 Před 11 měsíci +22

    These people are so surprisingly intelligent and down-to-earth. They know so much about the environment they life in, it's impressive. On the contrary, the average people around me...

    • @main_tak_becus6689
      @main_tak_becus6689 Před 11 měsíci

      South Koreans are among the highest IQ people in the world. Most of them are smart.

    • @Tirlex
      @Tirlex Před 11 měsíci +5

      yeah even then being so intelligent they are still living an average life. This just goes to show that just being intelligent isn't gonna be enough for you to be rich or well off in your life. Sad really.

    • @garesonc9672
      @garesonc9672 Před 10 měsíci

      @@Tirlex At least they have perspective though which gives some comfort. The average low income worker in America: "Just raise wages and it will fix all our problems".

  • @NonPensavo
    @NonPensavo Před 11 měsíci +36

    Honestly, I think Korea is one of the cheapest developed countries around. Transparency and low tax (Yes, it is) and low rent prices (YES) makes it possible to save money, afford brand new car and parking (cheap residential parking). Lived there (Seoul, Mapo gu) 7 years till 2023. Just learn to cook, learn to save, that's it. People can afford travel, eat delicious food and coffee etc. You cant find such country, although everyone hates to admit this. There are problems always like min wage etc but hey, look around.

    • @jw841
      @jw841 Před 11 měsíci +17

      As someone who grew up in South Africa but who has lived in a few developed countries like the UK and US I found life in Korea super easy and very affordable. The taxes are lower than SA, everything worked. What makes life hard for Koreans is their unrealistic expectations especially from family and the obsession with status and luxury items. Met many Koreans that made life unnecessarily difficult for themselves trying to keep up with the Jones.

    • @user-bodyfulness
      @user-bodyfulness Před 11 měsíci +4

      Yes true

    • @richrich2862
      @richrich2862 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@jw841I’m from South Africa too, just came back from traveling round Asia haven’t been there since 2017 and man Singapore is crazy expensive…to do my eyelashes and nails cost over 300 SD that’s like almost R7000 which is literally someone’s monthly salary here in SA. For a Japanese pancake on Panda Express cost me 68SD wtffff I was just gobsmacked at the intense price increase since the last time traveling through Asia, it’s even more expensive that Europe’s luxury hubs - and I convert everything to Rands in my mind and I’m like man the world has gone crazyyyyyyy😂

  • @pokepork7747
    @pokepork7747 Před 11 měsíci +46

    Considering the high living cost and the house pricing of Korea especially Seoul, it makes sense that the birthrate of Korea is very low.

    • @0o0_en
      @0o0_en Před 11 měsíci +6

      So true

    • @earlysda
      @earlysda Před 11 měsíci +7

      Actually, there is very little correlation.
      People have relatively more disposable income these days.
      But like that young woman said, they are more interested in fashion and hanging out than in raising families.

    • @bellei365
      @bellei365 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@earlysdabut why have a family when you know you can never afford a house to raise the children in?

    • @earlysda
      @earlysda Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@bellei365 belle, Please read a history book. What percentage of humans in all of history lived all their lives in a home they owned?
      .
      Learn from the past, believe in Jesus, and hope for the future.

    • @synthraofficial5366
      @synthraofficial5366 Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@earlysdaalso incorrect in this instance. There is absolutely a correlation between cost of living and children. Not to mention the fact that you could Google this and find out that that is exactly the reason in addition to how severely unfair is to have a child in a country like Korea or Japan. The system is very skewed against women especially after they have kids.

  • @social.media.command
    @social.media.command Před 11 měsíci +4

    Thank you for your report.

  • @shinonkim4814
    @shinonkim4814 Před 9 měsíci +67

    As a Korean that has lived in the states his whole life, and has traveled extensively I can tell you this thing is happening everywhere. The middle class is being abolished everywhere, especially in developed nations. I am now looking to save enough money to move to a developing country and buy a decent house, and have money that can use for a small business there.

    • @yelissarodriguez3010
      @yelissarodriguez3010 Před 9 měsíci +10

      We going through the same thing in developing countries tho...

    • @Blee48
      @Blee48 Před 9 měsíci

      Unsure where you lived but middle class in the US are the main house buyers. There is more affordable houses and locations in a single US State than Korea. The issue with Korea is that anything outside the major cities less developed and job opportunities in those areas are scarce so it's driving up cost of living in the cities jobs are available.

    • @doraemonpawnz
      @doraemonpawnz Před 9 měsíci

      As a citizen of a developing country, you're effectively trying to displace our working class. Australians bought our properties and jacked up the price so much that locals have a hard time to catch up. Just move to a rural part of your country ffs

    • @NHJDT
      @NHJDT Před 8 měsíci +3

      Which less developed countries are you contemplating?

    • @sechabatheletsane9784
      @sechabatheletsane9784 Před 7 měsíci +2

      ​@@yelissarodriguez3010 exactly!😂 I mean if he's working in dollars get a house could work but life ain't getting easier here in South Africa.

  • @may.b.tomorrow
    @may.b.tomorrow Před 11 měsíci +8

    In a country where the majority of people can't afford a house, government should intervine and help make housing more affordable through measures such as subsidies, affordable housing programs, rent control, housing cooperatives etc, and also what MOST miss is proper urban planning policies.
    The primary cause of housing issues for instance, in the United States, can be attributed to large corporations treating houses as investment assets. These companies purchase properties in an area and either rent them out or sell them at significantly inflated prices. Rather than constructing larger housing complexes, they focus on building small single-family houses on individual plots of land. Lack of/Not proper Zoning and Land rules hurt average folks the most there.

  • @ckokloong
    @ckokloong Před 11 měsíci +5

    Just bought a 1200 sqft house in rural area in Malaysia for my retirement. USD50k. House in urban area at least 6 times more expensive.

  • @juanpAAA2059
    @juanpAAA2059 Před 11 měsíci

    That was a great topic.

  • @sleepysarah.
    @sleepysarah. Před 10 měsíci +3

    I think this is the same for lots of countries, housing is just not affordable. Lots of people I know have degrees but are still working for minimum wage and even living with their parents and saving every penny they can't keep up with how much house prices go up by every few months. Even buying a small flat comes with added maintenance charges which can be as much each month as a house loan. And wherever I've lived, all the smaller, cheaper places have been bought by people to rent out because it's so lucrative. It's just a no win situation. Wages here quoted here seem decent by comparison tho.

  • @elnino1759
    @elnino1759 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Ever try living in Laos, Ghana, Burundi? I know life in Korea can be difficult but I’ve lived there for a while and I can tell it’s much much much easier compare to those countries above. If you live on a well managed budget, not eating out changing you clothes every collection, partying and drinking like crazy

    • @Carolina-fx2mz
      @Carolina-fx2mz Před 9 měsíci

      You’re talking as a foreigner, not a Korean living in Korea. A lot of the money an average Korean spends is to comply with social pressure and show off on social media.

  • @2129hours
    @2129hours Před 10 měsíci +2

    I’m thankful that singapore government allows the citizen to buy subsidized flat (apartment) and most of the case, you don’t even need to take out a single cent to buy it. I just bought a flat myself and it’s big enough for me to live comfortably.

  • @ettenadra
    @ettenadra Před 11 měsíci +3

    I want to be friends with tattooed unnie! It seems like her convos with friends are a lot similar with my circle but yet she still seems optimistic and cheerful :) Its quite depressing to think your salary will never be enough but I like her outlook on it. I hope she and her friends get a salary raise soon!

  • @WhatIsThis-zq4hk
    @WhatIsThis-zq4hk Před 11 měsíci +8

    Not a lot of talk about rent prices, only the cost of buying. Rent in Korea is actually quite affordable compared to the west. I know someone who pays 600 usd /month for a nice studio right on the beach in Busan. And even a part time service worker can at least afford a goshiwon even in a nice area of seoul.

    • @AntoineGrondin
      @AntoineGrondin Před 10 měsíci

      anything outside of Seoul doesn't compare at all to Seoul. It's like comparing Manhattan to North Carolina.

    • @WhatIsThis-zq4hk
      @WhatIsThis-zq4hk Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@AntoineGrondin There are plenty of people paying $600/month in seoul as well, but not on the beach of course. Some pay even less.

    • @Caroleenakoreaadventures
      @Caroleenakoreaadventures Před 10 měsíci

      Exactly!!

    • @alexyounghunlee
      @alexyounghunlee Před 10 měsíci

      Usually comes with high deposit though. For a monthly rent of $500, you are usually expected to pay deposit for 8k~10k. I know you get it back, but still.

  • @Menion98
    @Menion98 Před 11 měsíci +16

    9:30 reminder that if you can’t pay your employees a livable wage you don’t deserve a business with employees

    • @humanbeing8948
      @humanbeing8948 Před 11 měsíci +5

      Right! Employers are not entitled to employees.

    • @markusmeldre
      @markusmeldre Před 11 měsíci +2

      Exactly, this man just admitted that he doesn't want to pay above minimum wage lol.

    • @garesonc9672
      @garesonc9672 Před 10 měsíci

      Reminder that if a business can't make a profit due to high wages...those workers are now unemployed.

    • @Menion98
      @Menion98 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@garesonc9672 then the business isn’t successful and should shut down. But nah most of the time if not all the time they can afford to pay more. Cost of production, living wage for the owner, living wages for the workers. Don’t care about “profits” until those things are met. Profits are extra: check your privilege, thinking you deserve profits when the needs aren’t met yet

  • @Alfredwijaya1
    @Alfredwijaya1 Před 11 měsíci +15

    I work n live in Seoul, housing in Seoul is extremely expensive compare to Singapore, I work in my family business which expand in Korea, my parents got me an apartment in Gangnam Area around 2021, during corona housing price were not expensive compare to now, nowadays everything is already increasing, now I had to increased wages for my employees to be able for them to survive n working hours sufficient enough for them

    • @melmelexplores
      @melmelexplores Před 11 měsíci +2

      And I thought singapore houses were expensive enough…

    • @Alfredwijaya1
      @Alfredwijaya1 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@melmelexplores Singapore house is really expensive, especially if lived in orchard back when around 2005 it wasn’t really expensive compare to nowadays n now it’s not worth to buy it

    • @minyaksayur
      @minyaksayur Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@melmelexplores very if you are looking for a house, prepare $5 mill. At $1 mill you are looking at an apartment.

    • @melmelexplores
      @melmelexplores Před 11 měsíci

      @@minyaksayur haha yes I’m from singapore 🇸🇬

    • @TrinhNguyen-sh4fj
      @TrinhNguyen-sh4fj Před 11 měsíci

      I am shocked that Seoul is even more expensive than Singapore.

  • @tonyfox25
    @tonyfox25 Před 10 měsíci

    @asian boss, how about doing one compilation with several countries of similar conditions

  • @myrajoy1437
    @myrajoy1437 Před 9 měsíci

    Thanks for sharing impormision about Korea

  • @samuelkim8959
    @samuelkim8959 Před 11 měsíci +16

    I would love if you guys could do a interview on how people with debt deal with it. Do creditors go after their families too or is it more like the US where you. Can legally clear your debt via Chapter 7 bankruptcy. It would be interesting to find out what goes on other countries.

    • @user-fz6hz3uc9x
      @user-fz6hz3uc9x Před 11 měsíci +2

      제가 알기엔 미국이나 다른 나라들과 비슷합니다. 한국제도는 다른 나라들과 동떨어져 있지는 않습니다.

    • @user-fz6hz3uc9x
      @user-fz6hz3uc9x Před 11 měsíci +2

      드라마에서는 가장 최악의 불법적인 경우만을 다루지만 대부분의 사람들은 다른 유럽 미국 나라들과 비슷한 대출제도 아래에서 생활합니다.

  • @kiwisaram9373
    @kiwisaram9373 Před 10 měsíci +3

    I think the Korean Times reported that most apartment purchases were being made by young people and that alot of them were single person occupations. Because of the restriction on how many properties a person can have in Korea, many parents buy two or three apartments in their children's names thus avoiding property taxes.

    • @diegochoi
      @diegochoi Před 9 měsíci

      May I see the official finger for it. I do understand that there are some cases, but it is very a few... please do search..

  • @anonnnymousthegreat
    @anonnnymousthegreat Před 11 měsíci +2

    I feel like to even afford a house these days, you would almost have to gather some people you trust that makes as much as you do or more and just pay for all the expenses for it all together. Because to even get a house alone is near impossible for the average salaries person. Even in places where they make houses decently priced.

  • @trajanz9557
    @trajanz9557 Před 11 měsíci +10

    If major metropolis' world wide are pricing everyone out then do what the boomer generations did and buy an affordable house in an area that has good potential to become a second boom city in 20-30 years by the time you pay off your mortgage. People priced out will have to go somewhere where they will eventually cluster and investment will follow. You don't want to be at the mercy of landlords when you're old and in retirement.

  • @gatita_bunee
    @gatita_bunee Před 11 měsíci +5

    Its smart to just live without spending too much and paying rent while saving for retirement. For emergencies or anything worth living for. May not get what you want all the time but will live less stressful.

    • @garesonc9672
      @garesonc9672 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Well said...live within your means.

  • @cherylpurdue888
    @cherylpurdue888 Před 11 měsíci +5

    Australia has a housing crisis ,as well as cost of living,it's like that all around the world😢🙏🏻

  • @alexyeo7966
    @alexyeo7966 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Some of the translations related to square footage seemed off?

  • @toppicks6460
    @toppicks6460 Před 10 měsíci +28

    Am a Ugandan, and have been to Seoul and Busan recently.. it is true that stuff is definitely more expensive there, I could see how harder it'd be to achieve my financial goals living in Seoul with my $4000 monthly salary here in Uganda had I lived there permanently. At any rate, a beautiful experience it was in S-Korea and I got the chance to put the little Korean I've learnt over the years to practice... will definitely go back:)

    • @dj_here
      @dj_here Před 10 měsíci +2

      I loved being in Korea as well. also helped to put my Korean to good use.

    • @thomgizziz
      @thomgizziz Před 10 měsíci

      Really stuff in korea is more expensive than uganda??? Who would have ever thought that? You are in a third world country vs one that is first. Your comparison is next to useless and why on earth would you be learning korean?

    • @ant_baez
      @ant_baez Před 10 měsíci

      I am so sorry you’re from a homophobic country

    • @rs-dp6pr
      @rs-dp6pr Před 9 měsíci

      4000 you live like a king in your country.. you will be average in Korea or China.. you will be poor in America unless you live in crappy states such as deep South..

  • @tionne4716
    @tionne4716 Před 11 měsíci +5

    The way I dread even buying groceries because everything has become soo expensive 😩

  • @timmanto1022
    @timmanto1022 Před 8 měsíci

    Whats more expensive Seoul or Downtown Toronto/Vancouver. For me those are the options. Im thinking of studying IR and would love to do a term in East Asia somewhere.

  • @breakaway2x
    @breakaway2x Před 10 měsíci +1

    It depends on how you live. Korea can be very cheap or expensive. I lived in a small town 1 hour outside of Seoul. I paid only $200-$300 for rent. Internet $30, Phone plan $40, Electricity $50 / month, Gas/hot water $30, Food $500 a month, car insurance about $300 per year, Gas $80 bucks a month, bought a used car for just $950 and used it for 3 years. In total I only needed to spend around $1k to $1.5k a month to live comfortably. I was able to save up to $25,000-$30,000 a year from my job(s).
    Prices have been going up where dinners used to cost me $5-$7 now it is up to around $8-$12.

  • @kurarisusa
    @kurarisusa Před 11 měsíci +25

    We have the same problem with raising min wage here. It really doesn't solve the problem because businesses either automate, hire less people, or find other ways to get around it. The smaller business sometimes can't deal and go out of business. Either way, more people are without an income and in the end no one is really helped. We need a better solution to fix the issue.

    • @animalsarebeautifulpeople3094
      @animalsarebeautifulpeople3094 Před 11 měsíci +4

      yes, raising minimum wage kills small businesses and actually makes wealth gap worse bc only huge cooperations can afford to pay higher wages

    • @garesonc9672
      @garesonc9672 Před 10 měsíci

      Tell that to the Democrats....raising minimum wage is always their "go to"....and its kills the very people who vote them into office.

    • @thomgizziz
      @thomgizziz Před 10 měsíci

      @@animalsarebeautifulpeople3094 It is worse than that. People always complain about there being no middle class, raising minimum wage is a great way to destroy the middle class and everybody is to slow to understand why. Raising minimum wage doesn't make poor people richer, the poor people stay at the same level of poverty but it does do something to the middle class...

  • @stefanmarinov5515
    @stefanmarinov5515 Před 11 měsíci +18

    So basically younger generations are stuck in what the older generations built for them, yet the older generation think that their life at the same age is comparable with today’s world and claim they have the same opportunities? LOL, I am not Korean or live in Korea but looking at it from afar it seem ridiculous. Didn’t this country had an incredible economic growth it the past decades due to variety of factors and didn’t the population became richer in general with many opportunities along the way to be successful due to this? How can they compare today’s life in Korea to this. Crazy. I really feel for these young people

    • @harashe1000
      @harashe1000 Před 11 měsíci +10

      Well said! I hate how that older man said "put the energy you use to complain into finding a way to work hard and become successful," as if there aren't millions of hardworking people who are poor. If a job is needed (like maintaining clean streets, getting rid of trash, teaching students, serving food/working at a grocery store, transportation services like taxis, etc.), it should come with good pay and resources for the worker. Those kind of people always want to say "you can find a way to become successful and rich if you look hard enough," but that's such a nonsense message. If everyone abandons their low-paying jobs to try to be rich, what would our cities look like? They would be terrible to live in!
      I respect the everyday worker who works hard with little thanks. I really want our world to change and realize the bottom of the pyramid is more important than the top.

    • @hannesRSA
      @hannesRSA Před 11 měsíci +1

      ​@@harashe1000 so you want a high minimum wage, socialism? There are also disadvantages to this approach. People become lazy and low skill workers end up earning more for what they do than highly skilled hard workers, becoming a burden for everyone.

    • @hannesRSA
      @hannesRSA Před 11 měsíci

      People want to conveniently compare only parts of life with the past. 50y ago Seol would not be as densely populated, so the equivalent location today is elsewhere.. somewhere at the same stage of development. Also life is better now, some aspects like internet did not even exist.

    • @harashe1000
      @harashe1000 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@hannesRSA yes, I want a higher minimum wage. A minimum wage should be enough for people to live fully. What we have now is a wage that people are always scrapping and struggling to get by on. They struggle just to rent housing, get cheap foods that wreck their body, and live hard lives that wreck their mental health and happiness. I’m not saying everyone should be paid a million dollars; I’m saying it’s common sense and a basic right that any full-time worker should earn wages that allow for a full life. Home ownership, health, decent food- these things should not only be available to the wealthy. Can you say you go even a week without depending on the services of a low-paid worker in some capacity? No, you can’t. Then what makes you think that low-paid worker doesn’t deserve basic stability in their lives?

    • @simonpegg1196
      @simonpegg1196 Před 11 měsíci

      @@harashe1000 Good point! I'm sure the old man is a Baby Boomer. Baby Boomers all over the world have this message to the subsequent generations - find a way, work hard, stop complaining etc. I think the main problem for some Gen X-ers, and more so, millennials and Gen-Zers is the fact that all over the world, Baby Boomers are just not quitting their jobs. They want to hold onto their cushy, stable jobs till their last breath, with many of them working well through their 70s. How will the next generation get a chance when these oldies would just not budge from their seats?

  • @Ap-re5dy
    @Ap-re5dy Před 9 měsíci +1

    Seoul is really quite expensive,
    At the old days like 5-10years ago it was cheaper than Japan.
    But compared to my travel expenses of this two this year, it rise pretty much and far more expensive than Tokyo/Osaka

  • @janemuses3031
    @janemuses3031 Před 6 měsíci

    Wow the discrepancy between the average salary and the cost of real estate is really tough for any young person to afford housing in Seoul unless they have financial help from parents. Its the same here in the States especially in West Coast cities (San Franciso and neighboring Silicon Valley) and New York City. But at least the pay here is much higher so there is at least a striking chance to own a small place if one works for hitech and gets lucky with options/equity.

  • @Poetic_Justice_YC
    @Poetic_Justice_YC Před 10 měsíci +11

    Just came back from a 2 week holiday from Korea. I can confirm some of these prices are slightly over-exaggerated. Such as the man at 6:16 said buckwheat noodle is 13k won, I can confirm this is definitely at the higher end of the scale for buckwheat noodles, they are mostly in the range of approximately 8k-10k won, for example the famous Myeongdong buckwheat noodle is 10k, and same for many places I’ve been to. Also at 6:43 when she said cafe cost minimum 30k, that is also not true, it depends on what you order, a coffee is around 3-5k won, you can definitely spend under 10k per person. Brunch for 50k is ridiculous, unless you’re eating fancy of course. A good meal can cost under 20k per person, I’d argue even 10k is enough.

    • @Poetic_Justice_YC
      @Poetic_Justice_YC Před 10 měsíci

      Food such as fried chicken is around 24-26k won, we had it at 3 different restaurants and this is the range for all 3. This gets you more than enough quantity for 2 adults to finish. For Korean bbq, it costs around 40-50k won, sample size is 4 restaurants. This is 2 adults with 1 drink.

    • @user-tp6ow6dr6l
      @user-tp6ow6dr6l Před 10 měsíci

      공산주의 중국도 아니고, 민주주의 국가 한국 사람이 별로 반대하지 않는다는 것은 당신이 방문했던 가게가 일반적이지 않았을 가능성이 있음을 의미합니다. 당신은 한국인들이 세계에서 가장 불평하기를 좋아한다는 사실을 인정해야 할 것입니다😅

    • @Poetic_Justice_YC
      @Poetic_Justice_YC Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@user-tp6ow6dr6l I just been in Korea for 2 weeks, eating out 3 meals per day that’s enough sample size buddy. And I was picking highly rated restaurants. I said nothing about China or whatever political issue, just being objective here with the prices.

    • @96NightRider96
      @96NightRider96 Před 10 měsíci

      cooking at home costs even less

    • @thomgizziz
      @thomgizziz Před 10 měsíci

      @@Poetic_Justice_YC Dude 2 adults with drinks??? When you are replying to somebody that is talking about per a person? How disingenuous are you?

  • @Chris-fk6ch
    @Chris-fk6ch Před 11 měsíci +83

    As the older man said: Prices are determined by supply and demand.
    South Korea is currently undergoing the biggest demographic crisis in the world. This will rapidly decrease demand for housing and thus price of houses in the short/medium run.
    It's also worthwhile to note that house prices for appartments are showing steady and slow decrease from their peak levels in 2021 in the entire country and seoul inner metropolitan area (korean statistical office). Therefore in my opinions as someone studying economics. It's not the question if house prices will go down but when.

    • @spare97
      @spare97 Před 11 měsíci +7

      I agree, but Kangnam will be exception as there is limited space and high demand, so the money will always flock there. Other areas of Seoul though should go down. (Another hot area right now is Songdo in Incheon. Prices there are in the same demand cycle as Kangnam.)

    • @Kindapple
      @Kindapple Před 11 měsíci +12

      Korea indeed have some disastrous demographic crisis ongoing however less ppl does not mean ppl desire less to live in Gangnam or central part.
      Also need to remember that single household is rapidly increasing which still bump up the competition to get location in the central part. so each apt unit what 4+ ppl used to live is now slowly being replaced by 1~2 ppl.
      also there was a rapid decrease in price early this yr like 20~30% in Gangnam however it rapidly recovered to like 90% of the peak and some bougiest part of Gangnam hasn't even experienced decline at all (ex: Apgujeong).

    • @Chris-fk6ch
      @Chris-fk6ch Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@Kindapple Fair point about the changing composition of households. I couldnt find any peer reviewed study investigating south koreans elasticity to move out of their parental homes to a decrease in house prices in english. So far studies only stated this elasticity is likely low due to deeply ingrained confucianism family values.
      but if young south koreans indeed respond strongly to house price decreases than small house price decreases undoubtedly will increase the demand pool for housing by a relatively large amount, stabilizing demand overall and ultimately prices too..
      from what i understand, the government is aware of these housing price issues and its effect on fertility levels so im curious what policies they will implement to tackle these problems in the future.

    • @stoneone1479
      @stoneone1479 Před 11 měsíci

      When this generation of throw away finally leaves the capital. Home prices go up because rent prices go up first.
      Take out all the renters and prices will go down because buying multiple properties isn't as lucrative anymore. Wealthy people buy up all the real estate to then rent it back to all the poor and middle class. This will go on as long as these idiots stay in the capital trying to make ends meet.

    • @Kindapple
      @Kindapple Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@Chris-fk6ch I mean living with their parents are actually on the rise in any 1st world countries because of insane property prices but still ppl obviously move out or at least try to whether they get old enough or get married. there is a # of household statistics from Korean gov't which I'm too lazy to find but its on steady rise every single year. in this age even marriage became a very questionable life choice and divorced ppl created another household too.
      There have already been numerous policies by Korean gov't(previous, by liberal party) to tackle property price increase however also happen to be the time that had the most insane price increase lol my take on this is that this is purely a result of a ongoing trend that stems deeply from our model of capitalism that any humans share globally at the moment that cannot be solved by gov't policies whatnot. Same thing is ongoing in London, Paris, etc

  • @GabrielaSolano
    @GabrielaSolano Před 11 měsíci +1

    Wow. I never realized buying a house in Korea was that expensive. I’m from Houston, Texas, USA and I’m looking to buy a 2700 sq ft town house for 430k and I thought that was reasonable since the area was nice. But holy cow, it is def not the same in another country.

  • @Trisha-oo7jz
    @Trisha-oo7jz Před 8 měsíci +1

    It's same everywhere. I don't think I'll be ever able to buy a place on my own with my current job. Food, transport, health every thing is so expensive

  • @Hoang-88
    @Hoang-88 Před 11 měsíci +9

    Living in Korea for 5.5 years, I sent 92% of my salary home every month. I keep a bit more than enough for food only since i’m not the materialistic type. I spent less than 200$ on food, 100$ rent ( i don’t live in Seoul ) and i have my own room but shared the living room and kitchen with 2 others people and it’s a pain 🤧. I never eat outside since i’m a plants eaters, so i cook my own food.

    • @inwenc
      @inwenc Před 11 měsíci +1

      nice, a plant eater as myself :D

    • @Hoang-88
      @Hoang-88 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@inwenc don’t live in Korea, they has no mercy for plants eaters. Fruits is ridiculously expensive and there weren’t many to begin with. I am quite underweight and suffer dearly because of it, vegan restaurants are no where to be found. But like people say, when you witness the horror of the meat industry, you could never go back.

    • @inwenc
      @inwenc Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@Hoang-88 ive told a Korean that I'm vegan and she's like "I can't imagine myself without meat". So Korea doesn't sound like an attractive destination to me. krakow, Poland is so vegan friendly.

    • @inwenc
      @inwenc Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@Hoang-88 how about lentils and chickpeas prices?

    • @Hoang-88
      @Hoang-88 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@inwenc oh those are fine, it’s cheap enough , as long as it’s not fruits 🍎. And i live on those from day to day, veggies and potatoes 🥔. I heard because of the weather, they can’t grow a lot of plants, and so they has to import the fruits from other nations, that’s why it’s expensive. Whatever it is, i’m not paying 20$ for a watermelon 🍉😵‍💫. And yeah; the concept of someone not eating meat is very new in Korea 🇰🇷, I often get asked about the reason why I don’t eat meat, and when I explain it, they couldn’t understand it 😭, so i will just say i am a monk 😊. They told me I wouldn’t last long in Korea if I refuse to eat meat.
      And Poland is great, I never have the luck to go anywhere but Korea. But i heard it’s very peaceful in Poland except the war is going on in the east. But not a lot of immigrants, no riots and vegan friendly places 👍

  • @alditahervianto9179
    @alditahervianto9179 Před 11 měsíci +9

    Move to Ansan is better option

  • @vanderwoodsonian4773
    @vanderwoodsonian4773 Před 11 měsíci

    If you visit Seoul so many apartments are in there..and korean dont think oneroom villa or officetel is the apartment...In korea apartment means so many buildings with big community like swimming pool, park , gym... In seoul new apartment costs 10억(34pyeong) and in southern gangnam costs 25억(34pyeong) and in northern gangnam with han river view costs 34억(34pyeong)

  • @TheBombayMasterTony
    @TheBombayMasterTony Před 9 měsíci

    Good points.

  • @astrostar49
    @astrostar49 Před 11 měsíci +5

    6:06 That guy's hair is legendary.

    • @richrich2862
      @richrich2862 Před 11 měsíci

      Kept thinking he wearing a beanie

  • @aaronpugliese
    @aaronpugliese Před 11 měsíci +11

    seoul is expensive in certain popular areas which are usually nightlife hotspots. if you go to cheaper areas which will have a lot of the same stores the prices are way cheaper than the U.S. When these interviews pop up and people complain about prices its always high prices in Hongdae or Gangnam, places with a lot of foreigners and wealthy individuals. For instance, Kwanak-gu, a 15 minute subway ride from Gangnam, still in Seoul, apartments are around $500-800. Another issue is korean people will not renovate and buy in an older building which could be a lot cheaper, they all want the brand new shiny building to impress their family and builders are ripping people off that way by charging 2-3 million these days.

    • @D0x1511af
      @D0x1511af Před 11 měsíci +1

      spotted on....korea one of most cheapest country to living if compare to Japan

    • @TrinhNguyen-sh4fj
      @TrinhNguyen-sh4fj Před 11 měsíci

      Good points and it same here in the US or anywhere which is the area where you live in. It depends on the area regardless of where you are at.

    • @sarahsseoulsearch
      @sarahsseoulsearch Před 11 měsíci +1

      In my experience the older and crappier the building (especially if it's in a good school district) people will actually pay insane prices for a property there because it is likely that it will be redeveloped and they will be offered 1.5x - 3x what they put into the house to leave. People pay for the land the building is on not the building itself

    • @jalfredprufrock620
      @jalfredprufrock620 Před 11 měsíci +2

      The $500-800 is assuming you can leverage $25k-50k in capital for the deposit. The less you can come up with, the steeper the rent. If landlords in LA or SF started asking for a sum like that as the security deposit upfront the homeless population would grow 10x overnight even if it's in return for lowering the rent by 60%.

    • @user-xn3ri9ui1j
      @user-xn3ri9ui1j Před 10 měsíci

      people can not buy apartment anywhere in Korea with $500-800. You mean rent per month?

  • @user-uw9qk1sz2p
    @user-uw9qk1sz2p Před 10 měsíci

    I have a commercial building(4floor) in Seoul. Its beyond expensive but i am very happy of this and someday this good luck come to me.

  • @RheaFenrir
    @RheaFenrir Před 10 měsíci +1

    My DH is currently earning a monthly take home pay of 6.5 Mil KRW, but still we are only left with little disposable cash by the end of the month, 😅. We spent most of our money on the upkeeping of our 2 houses and family allowances because lots of our family members depend on us to live by. What I am trying to say is the true high monthly net salary in South Korea should be any numbers ABOVE 10 Mil KRW. Net monthly salary of 5-6 Mil KRW is actually just a middle class salary.

  • @AHHHHHHH162
    @AHHHHHHH162 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Please do an episode on NewJeans K-pop group. They seem to be very popular

    • @BlackHoleSpain
      @BlackHoleSpain Před 11 měsíci

      There are lots of new groups every month.

  • @Vminkook2seokjoongi
    @Vminkook2seokjoongi Před 11 měsíci +3

    Inflation is kicking everyone’s ass. I’m so tired of it

  • @bjcanz
    @bjcanz Před 11 měsíci +1

    Maybe they could scatter around the country the university school, business that will force and benefit people not going to a single city and maybe it will help the distribution of competition on market , houses, school , and work

    • @garesonc9672
      @garesonc9672 Před 10 měsíci

      But the market should decide where business go...not the government. You'd get an even worse result if you tried to centrally manage these things(ask Cuba, the old Soviet Union, China before Deng, Pol Pot's Cambodia).

    • @bjcanz
      @bjcanz Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@garesonc9672 why are you comparing it to the communist leadership country, is SK a communist country ?
      its not like that , wouldn't be better if the work office , market , school is near on your region so you won't have to travel far away , scattering the service and infrastructure around the country will produce more jobs and the rest will follow , not just in one city 🌆

  • @adammr7097
    @adammr7097 Před 8 měsíci

    Interesting view and personal story at the end from the man in suite and some gray hair.

  • @kenichi407
    @kenichi407 Před 9 měsíci +4

    there needs to be a fundamental shift in certain aspects of the Korean culture, namely the focus on appearances and "keeping with the joneses" mentality. too many people who really don't have the income still go out and have their 10,000won coffees daily, wear nice clothes, buy brand/name luxury goods, drive expensive cars... not only for their own enjoyment, but to give off the "perception" they are well off in front of their friends, colleagues, family. it's just sad... super competitive atmosphere, and unnecessary shaming of those who can't keep up.

    • @Carolina-fx2mz
      @Carolina-fx2mz Před 9 měsíci +1

      Absolutely agree. I live in Korea, and see it every day. People are obsessed with looks (appearance, clothes, bags, cars..). From a European aristocratic perspective it looks kind of gross, especially because you can immediately see the people who are in debt and just pretend to be rich. The mentality really needs to change, however I suspect it’s the parents pushing for a lot of these old fashioned behaviours, and I know for a fact that people in their 30s are still too influenced by the old mentality to change.

  • @phyllo2694
    @phyllo2694 Před 11 měsíci +5

    In the states I live outside of one of the prominent cities. Living within driving distance of the exact amenities while paying lower taxes and buying a smaller house has made all the difference.
    The younger people need to change their mindset of always eating at the hippest new places and wearing so call expensive clothing. Pooling their monies and buying buildings as a group.
    Eating out / drinking should not be considered an everyday thing.
    The saying that applies here is “ Spending money you don’t have to impress people you don’t even like”!

  • @popcorners2912
    @popcorners2912 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Your sqft conversion is wrong in the captions and can be misleading. The officetel was 8 pyeong. That is NOT 36 sqft. It's 280 sqft. The older gentleman's comment was about a 34-pyeong apartment, which you correctly translated at first to 1210 sqft in the captions, but then the later caption said 36 sqft...

  • @ravell193992
    @ravell193992 Před 11 měsíci +1

    2:00 Maybe she was looking for a luxury office unit. With less than $700.000, You can still get an old but decent 2-3 bedroom apts in a residential apartment in Seoul.

  • @ronb.8920
    @ronb.8920 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Covid and supply chain issues are the major factors re: world economies. People in the US are saying many of the same things as these folks. Pre covid I could get bacon, eggs, fried potatoes, toast and coffee for around $7. I paid $13.49 the other day - not incl. the tip.

    • @earlysda
      @earlysda Před 11 měsíci +1

      ronb, I advise you to stop eating those things, and start eating healthy, or you will have big medical issues soon.

    • @ronb.8920
      @ronb.8920 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@earlysda haha thanks for the advice. My philosophy is you can enjoy all kinds of foods, provided you do so in moderation.

    • @synthraofficial5366
      @synthraofficial5366 Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@ronb.8920This is correct.

    • @synthraofficial5366
      @synthraofficial5366 Před 11 měsíci +1

      ​@@earlysdathere's literally nothing wrong with eating any of those things. Eggs are one of the best things for you. Bread has been keeping human beings alive for centuries. So if potatoes.

    • @earlysda
      @earlysda Před 11 měsíci

      @@synthraofficial5366 synth, the eggs are fried in oil, the potatoes have been skinned and fried in oil too. The coffee has caffeine.
      .
      Please start taking better care of this body that Jesus Christ has created for you.

  • @koreankiwi4400
    @koreankiwi4400 Před 11 měsíci +5

    this is same issue that happens in other countries and cities. u done alot of videos in sk, but can u do more videos in other countries too like china or japan or SEA?

  • @loa6223
    @loa6223 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Lifestyle matters. If survival includes everyday social or solo drinking, then for sure that takes the tiger's share from the salary. Living in an expensive city with a minimum salary is a lifestyle of priorities of needs and not of my boss's or colleagues' want.

  • @JuanJuanillo-um7fy
    @JuanJuanillo-um7fy Před 10 měsíci +1

    Estuve buscando Asian boss en esoañol y ya no está.
    Nisquiera ponen subtitulos en ese idioma .
    Que pena.😢

  • @black.sasuke.uchiha
    @black.sasuke.uchiha Před 11 měsíci +3

    I instinctively came to the comment section out of pure instinct, and I’ve actually never seen so many people requesting ideas! You guys really thought through this haven’t you? I’ve been subscribed for years and never saw so many suggestions for video ideas LoL.

  • @eleonore59830
    @eleonore59830 Před 11 měsíci +3

    that ajusshi is probably rich af lmao

  • @Poetic_Justice_YC
    @Poetic_Justice_YC Před 10 měsíci +1

    Can someone who speaks Korean please confirm if the old man at 2:57 said 36 Pyeong or 36 square ft? To me it only makes sense if he meant 36 Pyeong, which is approx 119 sq meters or 1279 sq ft. It’s really confusing with Pyeong and the Korean sq ft and the subtitle is quite bad with clarifying this. Should have added some background info about Korean sq ft and Pyeong. This makes huge difference in giving perspective since I’m trying to compare prices.

    • @fecesd5g
      @fecesd5g Před 9 měsíci

      He said 25 pyeong

  • @davidha8874
    @davidha8874 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Inflation is the worst. Here in the U.S. the govt increased the money supply extremely rapidly in 2020. But whenever more money is printed, the value of the money goes down and prices go up as a result. Most govts did the same as the U.S. by inflating their currencies

  • @xnicolo
    @xnicolo Před 11 měsíci +7

    I honestly think they mean 36 square METERS and not feet.

  • @yongchen8204
    @yongchen8204 Před 11 měsíci +4

    it is not just restricted in south korea. people in japan, china, hong kong and taiwan are sharing the growing pain for owning their dream home. it is so expensive to own a home with their meager salaries.

  • @ocean080
    @ocean080 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Koreans have a herd mentality, the culture is similar to Japan and it is also competitive with peer pressure. If your friend has a branded bag, you would want to keep up so you can blend into the group, even though you know you have to starve to get that bag. It is a stark contrast to Americans who are individualistic and independant minded.

  • @heisen8588
    @heisen8588 Před 11 měsíci +2

    I think the most interesting and impotant part is 10:29 ! No matter what happens you gotta be strong!

    • @jajiteol
      @jajiteol Před 11 měsíci

      저말mz들이제일기겁하는말ㅋㅋ그때랑지금이랑같냐고

    • @jajiteol
      @jajiteol Před 11 měsíci

      무식한애들이공무원하던때개나소나대기업가던때그래놓고라때는~

    • @heisen8588
      @heisen8588 Před 11 měsíci

      @@jajiteol I'm sorry i don't understand korean language!

  • @llbuitre
    @llbuitre Před 10 měsíci +3

    I've been in Tokyo and Seoul and yes they are both expensive. 😅Although for me, Seoul is much milder compared to Tokyo in terms of being expensive. There are much more cheap alternatives in Seoul compared to Tokyo. Like in food, there are a lot of local restaurants in Seoul that are affordable and we cook less. Unlike in Tokyo, some of our meals are from convenience store and we cook more to save money. We do local restaurants for one to two meals per day.

  • @Traveller127
    @Traveller127 Před 9 měsíci +6

    I guess this is the one reason why many Koreans chose to live and study in the Philippines. My Korean friend told me how expensive to live and study in South Korea. But for me as a Filipino I salute and kudos to the system of your Government because the economy of your country is quite good and very competitive. 😊

    • @corona__virus
      @corona__virus Před 8 měsíci +2

      성장하는 모든 국가가 겪게될 문제입니다

  • @golferdan906
    @golferdan906 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Hmm, I live in Korea after spending many years in the USA. Almost nobody is able to afford a home in the US either if they are paying cash full or need to put 40%+ down to get a loan, etc. like Korea. Housing being unaffordable is nothing new in big cities such as Seoul, Tokyo, SF, NY, London, Paris, etc.
    As for a comfortable wage, I think if you are in Korea and married with 2 kids you need at least 10m/month after taxes to cover education and various costs which is possible if both parents work or if the main breadwinner is at a large company. But of course this is tough so that's why we see the low birthrate that we do...

  • @TyroneClark-bu7ml
    @TyroneClark-bu7ml Před 5 měsíci

    Cool video

  • @Philson
    @Philson Před 11 měsíci +180

    The old man says the most boomer stuff. Not understanding that times are different now.

    • @Jasg111
      @Jasg111 Před 11 měsíci +21

      Yes it’s waaay more competitive now and many businesses in many industries have already been established so there’s more workers than bosses/leaders

    • @xiaoxiao3260
      @xiaoxiao3260 Před 11 měsíci +65

      Sure times are different, but these people lived through the aftermath of war and economic crisis, they had it hard too and had their own challenges that shaped their way of thinking.
      Whatever the older generation says might not be applicable or doable today like it was before but they didn't have it easier than us.

    • @spare97
      @spare97 Před 11 měsíci +23

      It was sad that he doesn't get that hard work isn't going to get you ahead like it did 50 years ago. Sure the super lucky who can get into Seoul National University can get out of poverty, but for the average Korean, it isn't happening no matter how hard they work. Him and his age group are the ones who keep voting in governments who make policies that don't address the reality of the poverty situation in Korea.

    • @user-kv6cy7ve5k
      @user-kv6cy7ve5k Před 11 měsíci

      전 부산에 살지만 15억원정도해요😢

    • @garesonc9672
      @garesonc9672 Před 10 měsíci +15

      Yeah he had it really easy living on a peninsula that had endured Japanese occupation, the Korean War and difficult economic conditions of the 70's that all occurred in Korea just before he was born or when he was young. Did you miss the part where he grew up poor????????

  • @Anoushka_D
    @Anoushka_D Před 11 měsíci +8

    I'm from Kolkata, India. And my head is spinning right now (If you know, how the costs are here) 🙂
    PS:- I know comparison in terms of cost between these two countries is vague, but still wanted to share this.

    • @jun8569
      @jun8569 Před 11 měsíci +4

      Yeah it’s hard to compare apples to oranges - South Korea’s minimum wage is ₩9,620 per hour, which is around $7.50 USD, and it is one of the highest in Asia..

    • @kimaduh1937
      @kimaduh1937 Před 10 měsíci +1

      😂 oh please India and Korea are like first class wine vs old rum

    • @befaithful3671
      @befaithful3671 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@kimaduh1937So ?? ..our currency holds more value than their currency..plus we are happy with our things ..and India is the only country in the world in 2023 that has 0% chances of recession.

  • @T0T91
    @T0T91 Před 9 měsíci

    Its the same struggle everywhwre for young people anywhere. Housing is just unaffordable anywhere now. I live in Canada

  • @yashshah5971
    @yashshah5971 Před 5 měsíci

    Are the apartment pricing and size right?
    36 square FEET apartment would cost over 2m USD? Are you sure it isn't sq meters?
    Even in NYC (Manhattan) you can buy a 1800 sq ft apartment for roughly $2.3m so this seems outrageous.

  • @TheReMorseCode
    @TheReMorseCode Před 11 měsíci +6

    That old man is so 꼰때 lol. "Just have hope bro" "I did it 55 years ago so you should be able to do it now"

    • @tatjana7008
      @tatjana7008 Před 11 měsíci +4

      he still done it in harsh times. Economic development started in Korea after 90ies, so he didn't have easy life for sure.

    • @garesonc9672
      @garesonc9672 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Did you miss the part where he said he grew up poor? Are you knowingly and dishonestly omitting that or did you fail to listen to him?

    • @fecesd5g
      @fecesd5g Před 9 měsíci +1

      ​@@tatjana7008you're off by two decades

    • @tatjana7008
      @tatjana7008 Před 9 měsíci

      @fecesd5g even if, his old age shows that he worked whole life and it wasn't chilling for sure. He worked for 40+ in difference to young people who just started.
      Still I'm more than sure, I'm not off in my timing, but you can have your opinion

  • @synthraofficial5366
    @synthraofficial5366 Před 11 měsíci +3

    I appreciate how everyone in my generation is screwed globally. Like, what happened to us having any quality of life and being able to do something besides just survive? And everyone just expects us to be okay with this and just accepted and go back to making money for them? Like, how. No.

  • @val9343
    @val9343 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Please put the unit in square meters too.. its quite inconvenient having to go back and forth google to convert the measures and stoping the video every two minutes. Having dollars as the monetary unit makes sense because it is trading standard but imperial system isn’t.. Please Asian boss

  • @omniultima4747
    @omniultima4747 Před 10 měsíci

    Man, what a rough time to live in this world right now. Seems like being a youtuber for new generation is the way to go or better yet becoming a professional athlete.