The Borneo Post

Not a baby factory: S. Korea tries to fix demographi­c crisis

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SEOUL: In just over a decade, South Korea has spent the equivalent of a small European economy trying to fix its demographi­c crisis, yet birthrates have dropped to the lowest in the world.

This year, President Moon Jae-In, who describes himself as a feminist president, is testing a new angle: showing women more respect.

At the end of last year, South Korea announced plans to remove some of the disincenti­ves for employing women, allowing both parents to take parental leave at the same time and extending paid paternal leave. Employers also get incentives to allow either parent to work fewer hours.

“Efforts on gender equality are very timely,” said Shin Eun-kyung, an economist with the Organisati­on for Economic Co- operation and Developmen­t. South Korea is the worst place for women to work in the OECD, despite women being among the organisati­on’s best educated, and more highly so than men.

But the measures go beyond the workplace: mothers can choose to give the baby their own last name and a tickbox on birth certificat­es showing whether a baby was born outside marriage will be removed.

Fertility treatments will be offered to single women and unmarried couples as well. Social campaigns will encourage men to participat­e more in child care and household chores.

Contrast that with a 2016 effort by the previous government, run by the country’s first woman president, Park Geun-hye, which launched a website carrying a real- time statistica­l heatmap of women of child-bearing age, marriages and births in the hope of spurring competitio­n between cities and regions.

The website was taken down after one day, with women complainin­g it made them feel like “reproducti­ve organs”.

“The country sees women as baby factories,” says Hong Sook-young, who produces the country’s most popular children TV show. Asked about the latest measures, Hong said “at least pretending to hear what people really want is a start towards change”.

South Korea’s demographi­c time bomb is ticking louder. The government’s latest forecast sees its population declining from 2027, and a presidenti­al committee said the country’s economic growth potential could fall to below 1 per cent.

Birth rates have long been a policy priority: since 2006, the government has spent 152.9 trillion won ( US$ 135.65 billion) – about the size of an economy like Hungary or Nevada – on perks for families and subsidies for children from birth through university and beyond.

Last year’s 26.3 trillion low birth policy budget was more than half the defence spending of a country technicall­y still at war with its northern neighbour.

But demographi­c experts say money is not the main issue: the experience of advanced countries with higher birth rates, such as France or Sweden, shows gender equality plays a crucial role.

The previous allocation of resources drew criticism as well.

The government went far beyond child allowances and subsidisin­g care and education. For instance, it funded temple stays for family bonding and financed youth seeking brief jobs abroad.

Many such programmes will end, with the 2019 birth- support budget cut by a quarter, to 20.5 trillion won.

“It should have been cut a long time ago,” said Jung Jae-hoon, social welfare professor at Seoul Women’s University.

Jung cautioned, however, the signal the government was finally sending will take a long time to filter through the conservati­ve east Asian society.

Births outside marriage, for instance, are so widely frowned upon that they amount to only 1.9 per cent of the total, the lowest anywhere.

Experts compare that to France, where the ratio is over 50 per cent and the birth rate is 1.9 versus South Korea’s 1.05. Abortion is illegal and adoption rules very strict.

The stigma of out- of-wedlock babies has seen Seoul’s Jusarang Community Church build an oven- sized ‘ baby box’, with cushions and a heating system into its outside wall.

Last year, 261 children were abandoned across the country, according to Statistics Korea.

About 56 per cent of women aged 15- 64 work in South Korea, below the OECD average of almost 60 per cent, and 7275 per cent in Denmark and Sweden, where birth rates are among the highest of advanced economies.

Recruiters say married young women are less likely to get job opportunit­ies due to discrimina­tion.

In November, the Supreme Court upheld a four-year jail sentence against a former CEO of state-run Korea Gas Safety Corp over manipulati­ng interview scores to knock women out of the hiring process.

While Samsung Electronic­s has a more balanced gender ratio than Apple globally, with women accounting for 45 per cent of the staff versus a third at its US rival, only one in four staff at its Korea headquarte­rs are women.

None of the nine board members at Hyundai Motor Co are women, versus six out of 12 at General Motors.

“The whole period of before, during and after childbirth weighs on our career,” said a female assistant manager at Hyundai Motor. The pay gap between sexes only makes it harder, she added.

South Korea’s gender wage gap is highest among advanced countries at 34.6 per cent, above OECD average of 13.8 per cent.

A Hy u n d a i Mo t o r spokeswoma­n said the firm was committed to providing equal opportunit­ies to all employees and opposes discrimina­tion.

A Samsung Electronic­s spokeswoma­n said the company has been recruit ing more females, including in managerial positions, and that most staff return to work after parental leave and its daycare centres can look after 3,000 children.

Still, critics say while Moon’s approach to birth rates is an improvemen­t, his job and housing policies discourage parenthood. Minimum wage hikes have led to higher unemployme­nt, while larger downpaymen­t requiremen­ts have made homes unaffordab­le for many.

“Creating a structure that enables us to have our own house is mostly needed,” said Lee Kyoung-min, a store manager at Lotte Mart, a father of three.

Some also argue worklife balance could be better: Moon in July cut the working week to 52 hours from 68, but South Koreans still work 15 per cent longer than the OECD average.

If birth rates don’t improve, South Korea’s economy could be 5 per cent smaller by 2060, as productivi­ty falls and higher spending for elderly care leaves less room for investment, the Nat ional Assembly Budget Office estimates.

Indust r ies catering for babies are struggling. Seoul has lost one in four maternity wards and in 2018 the capital sacked more than hal f its teachers.

Ryu Won-woo, manager of baby fair organiser BeFe, praised the government’s measures, especially those encouragin­g more responsibi­lities for dads. But he does not expect quick results.

“More local baby- product companies may disappear before Korea sees more babies,” Ryu said. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Volunteers take care of babies who were left in the baby box at Jusarang Community Church in Seoul, South Korea. — Reuters photo
Volunteers take care of babies who were left in the baby box at Jusarang Community Church in Seoul, South Korea. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Lee Kyoung-min, a store manager at Lotte Mart, dresses his daughters before taking them to school, at their home in Seoul, South Korea. – Reuters photo
Lee Kyoung-min, a store manager at Lotte Mart, dresses his daughters before taking them to school, at their home in Seoul, South Korea. – Reuters photo

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