South Korea’s birth rate is so low, the president wants to create a ministry to tackle it
South Korea’s birth rate is so low, the president wants to create a ministry to tackle it
우리나라 출산율 너무 낮아...대통령, 저출산 대처할 부서 신설 계획
우리나라는 세계에서 가장 낮은 출산율로 인해 심각한 인구통계학적 문제에 직면해 있다. 2022년 우리나라의 출산율은 0.78명으로 안정적인 인구 유지에 필요한 수준인 2.1명에 훨씬 못 미쳤다. 이에 따라 윤석열 대통령은 이 위기를 해결하기 위해 전담 부처를 신설할 것을 제안했다. 이 제안은 다양한 가족 및 복지 정책을 하나의 부처로 통합하여 절차를 간소화하고 효과를 높이는 것을 목표로 한다.
이 제안의 잠재적 이점으로는 가족 지원 프로그램의 조정이 개선되고 자원을 보다 효율적으로 배분할 수 있다는 점이 있다. 전문 부처는 높은 주거 비용과 일과 삶의 균형 문제와 같은 저출산의 근본 원인을 해결하는 종합적인 전략을 개발할 수 있다. 이러한 집중적인 접근 방식은 잠재적으로 기존 구조에서 나오지 않을 수 있는 혁신적인 솔루션으로 이어질 수 있다.
반면에 비평가들은 단순히 새로운 부처를 만드는 것만으로는 뿌리 깊은 사회적, 경제적 장벽을 극복하기에 충분하지 않을 수 있다고 주장하기도 한다. 또한 관료주의적 비효율성과 기존 기관과의 중복으로 인해 이 계획의 효과가 희석될 수 있다는 우려도 제기되고 있다.
전반적으로, 제안된 부처는 출산율을 높이기 위한 노력을 중앙 집중화하고 체계적인 접근 방식을 제공할 수 있지만, 그 성공 여부는 효과적이고 총체적인 정책의 실행에 달려 있다고 할 수 있다. 이러한 구조적 변화가 인구통계학적 추세에 큰 영향을 미칠 수 있을지, 아니면 더 근본적인 사회적 변화가 필요한지는 아직 지켜봐야 한다.
South Korea’s leader on Thursday said he plans to create a new government ministry to tackle the “national emergency” of the country’s infamously low birth rate as it grapples with a deepening demographic crisis.
In a televised address, President Yoon Suk Yeol said he would ask for parliament’s cooperation to establish the Ministry of Low Birth Rate Counter-planning.
“We will mobilize all of the nation’s capabilities to overcome the low birth rate, which can be considered a national emergency,” he said.
Speaking later in his first news conference since August 2022, held to mark two years in office, Yoon admitted his administration had fallen short in its efforts to improve people’s lives. He pledged to use the next three years of his term to improve the economy and address low births.
South Korea has the world’s lowest fertility rate, which indicates the average number of children a woman will have in her lifetime. It recorded a rate of just 0.72 in 2023 – down from 0.78 the previous year, the latest drop in a long string of yearly declines.
Countries need a fertility rate of 2.1 to maintain a stable population, in the absence of immigration.
The data underscores the demographic time bomb that South Korea and other East Asian nations are facing as their societies rapidly age just a few decades after their rapid industrialization.
Many European nations also face aging populations, but the speed and impact of that change is mitigated by immigration. Countries like South Korea, Japan and China, however, have shied away from mass immigration to tackle the decline in their working age populations.
Experts say the reasons for these demographic shifts across the region include demanding work cultures, stagnating wages, rising costs of living, changing attitudes toward marriage and gender equality, and rising disillusionment among younger generations.
But despite the economic factors at play, throwing money at the problem has proved ineffective. In 2022, Yoon admitted that more than $200 billion has been spent trying to boost the population over the past 16 years.
Initiatives like extending paid paternity leave, offering monetary “baby vouchers” to new parents, and social campaigns encouraging men to contribute to childcare and housework, have so far failed to reverse the trend.
Experts and residents have instead pointed to some deeper-rooted social issues – for instance, stigma against single parents, discrimination against non-traditional partnerships, and barriers for same-sex couples.
The Japanese government has tried a similar playbook to encourage couples to have children, to no avail – prompting the country’s leader to take urgent action in recent years.
In January 2023, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida warned that Japan was “on the brink of not being able to maintain social functions” due to the falling birth rate, and announced plans for a new government agency to focus on the issue.
That body, the Child and Families Agency, launched a few months later – intended to tackle a host of issues, from improving children’s health and welfare to supporting families and parents, according to its website.
These measures, ranging from boosting childcare services and providing places for children to play and live, aim to “overcome the declining birthrate” and create a society where people “feel hopeful about getting married, having children, and raising them,” the website says.