Berliner Boersenzeitung - South Koreans get younger as traditional age system dropped

EUR -
AED 3.875001
AFN 71.533064
ALL 98.190915
AMD 414.575736
ANG 1.895773
AOA 961.06805
ARS 1063.450417
AUD 1.624033
AWG 1.898965
AZN 1.789814
BAM 1.954282
BBD 2.123889
BDT 125.702331
BGN 1.957396
BHD 0.397728
BIF 3107.626514
BMD 1.05498
BND 1.412662
BOB 7.269386
BRL 6.313263
BSD 1.051953
BTN 88.81941
BWP 14.370562
BYN 3.442427
BYR 20677.613846
BZD 2.120292
CAD 1.477979
CDF 3027.79382
CHF 0.933022
CLF 0.037312
CLP 1029.567407
CNY 7.647659
CNH 7.651788
COP 4626.384002
CRC 537.272363
CUC 1.05498
CUP 27.956978
CVE 110.179914
CZK 25.27427
DJF 187.31913
DKK 7.458036
DOP 63.40953
DZD 140.932722
EGP 52.354243
ERN 15.824704
ETB 132.960671
FJD 2.394486
FKP 0.832714
GBP 0.833173
GEL 2.885392
GGP 0.832714
GHS 16.357368
GIP 0.832714
GMD 74.903689
GNF 9064.784969
GTQ 8.115733
GYD 220.080045
HKD 8.210062
HNL 26.604824
HRK 7.525448
HTG 137.958885
HUF 413.879283
IDR 16747.706737
ILS 3.845846
IMP 0.832714
INR 89.120533
IQD 1377.99014
IRR 44388.295917
ISK 144.943821
JEP 0.832714
JMD 166.157748
JOD 0.748297
JPY 160.172907
KES 136.883421
KGS 91.572079
KHR 4232.590988
KMF 492.146492
KPW 949.481868
KRW 1472.911055
KWD 0.324428
KYD 0.876594
KZT 528.674195
LAK 23097.396905
LBP 94198.330823
LKR 306.096365
LRD 188.290132
LSL 19.084929
LTL 3.115083
LVL 0.638147
LYD 5.146855
MAD 10.539961
MDL 19.265483
MGA 4922.035696
MKD 61.636023
MMK 3426.534856
MNT 3584.822997
MOP 8.429711
MRU 41.817716
MUR 49.058136
MVR 16.299579
MWK 1824.03089
MXN 21.443925
MYR 4.691528
MZN 67.39611
NAD 19.085109
NGN 1779.909825
NIO 38.70919
NOK 11.669907
NPR 142.109237
NZD 1.792447
OMR 0.406171
PAB 1.051983
PEN 3.959224
PGK 4.241624
PHP 61.920487
PKR 292.291853
PLN 4.313504
PYG 8222.377536
QAR 3.834139
RON 4.978294
RSD 117.0089
RUB 115.048296
RWF 1449.446327
SAR 3.963347
SBD 8.851908
SCR 14.381639
SDG 634.568703
SEK 11.539897
SGD 1.418068
SHP 0.832714
SLE 23.944526
SLL 22122.414361
SOS 601.221463
SRD 37.336278
STD 21835.962177
SVC 9.204586
SYP 2650.669499
SZL 19.081812
THB 36.309783
TJS 11.281713
TMT 3.702981
TND 3.317538
TOP 2.470871
TRY 36.507329
TTD 7.140317
TWD 34.370729
TZS 2791.067483
UAH 43.797125
UGX 3882.002149
USD 1.05498
UYU 45.085183
UZS 13515.370677
VES 49.363926
VND 26768.015107
VUV 125.249381
WST 2.945073
XAF 655.435312
XAG 0.035078
XAU 0.000399
XCD 2.851137
XDR 0.804652
XOF 655.429105
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.665928
ZAR 19.168011
ZMK 9496.090734
ZMW 28.690892
ZWL 339.703226
  • RELX

    0.2400

    47.05

    +0.51%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    34.33

    +0.9%

  • RYCEF

    0.1100

    6.91

    +1.59%

  • NGG

    0.5000

    63.33

    +0.79%

  • RBGPF

    1.0000

    62

    +1.61%

  • VOD

    0.1100

    8.97

    +1.23%

  • AZN

    0.8400

    67.2

    +1.25%

  • RIO

    0.2900

    62.32

    +0.47%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    24.52

    -0.2%

  • BTI

    0.2300

    37.94

    +0.61%

  • SCS

    -0.0700

    13.47

    -0.52%

  • BCC

    -2.0100

    146.4

    -1.37%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    24.36

    -0.29%

  • BP

    0.1700

    29.13

    +0.58%

  • BCE

    0.3900

    27.02

    +1.44%

  • JRI

    0.1700

    13.41

    +1.27%

South Koreans get younger as traditional age system dropped
South Koreans get younger as traditional age system dropped / Photo: ANTHONY WALLACE - AFP

South Koreans get younger as traditional age system dropped

Lee Jung-hee was set to turn 60 next year but South Korea dropped its traditional age counting system Wednesday, so the Seoul-based housewife just got a year younger -- and she's thrilled.

Text size:

South Korea is the last East Asian country to officially still use a method of calculating age that determines babies are aged one at birth, counting their months in the womb as their first year of life.

Under that system everyone gets a year older with the turn of the year rather than on their actual birthday, meaning a baby born on December 31 would be considered two years old on January 1 in Korean age.

From Wednesday South Korea will use the international system that calculates age according to a person's actual date of birth, meaning everyone will officially become a year or two younger.

"It feels good," Lee, a Seoul-based housewife, told AFP.

"For people like me, who were supposed to turn 60 next year, it makes you feel like you're still young," she laughed.

China, Japan, and even North Korea dropped the system decades ago but it has endured in the South, even as the land that gave the world K-pop and kimchi played a larger role on the international stage.

"It's confusing when a foreigner asks me how old I am as I know they mean international age, so I have to do some calculations," office worker Hong Suk-min told AFP.

Hong added, after a thoughtful pause, that he was 45 in international age and 47 under the Korean system.

The official change will have limited practical impact: many legal and administrative functions, including the age listed on a passport, the age at which one can be prosecuted as a juvenile, retirement benefits, or healthcare services, already uses date-of-birth rather than Korean age.

The government hopes the change will ease confusion and cites, for example, the issue of older Koreans who may believe they are eligible for pensions and free travel benefits several years before they legally are.

- Complex calculation -

"There is a difference between the age Koreans use in their daily lives and their legal age and because of that, various legal disputes may arise," Seoul's Minister of Government Legislation Lee Wan-kyu told AFP.

Lee, who is overseeing the official age change, opened a media briefing on Monday by attempting to teach the assembled Korean journalists how to determine how old they are.

"Subtract your birth year from the current year. If your birthday has passed, that's how old you are, and if your birthday has not passed, subtract one to get your age," he said.

Some key areas, including the school year, eligibility for compulsory military service, and the legal drinking age, are determined by another separate age system -- known as "year age" -- and this system will remain in place for now, Lee said.

This means that, for example, everyone born in 2004 -- whether January or December -- is eligible to begin the military enlistment process from January 1, 2023, because they are all legally considered to have met the minimum required age of 19.

The government might consider revising the use of "year age" for such areas depending on how the current changes go, Lee said.

- 'Age matters' -

The idea behind "year age" is to ease South Korea's linguistic-linked hierarchies by ensuring that everyone in one school year is considered the same age and so can speak to each other without using honorifics.

"Age really matters" in South Korean culture, anthropologist Mo Hyun-joo told AFP, because it affects one's relative social status and dictates which titles and honorifics one must use for others.

"It's hard to communicate with people without knowing their age," she said.

People typically use terms such as "unni" and "oppa" -- meaning older sister and older brother respectively -- rather than names in conversation, she said.

South Korea's "hierarchical age-based culture (might) become neutralised a little" over time, Mo said, because people become more used to using international age in school settings, for example.

For now most South Koreans, such as schoolboy Yoon Jae-ha from the southern port town of Busan, can simply enjoy feeling younger as the new legislation comes into effect.

"My age has shrunk," he told AFP.

"I like being younger because then my mum will take care of me longer."

(G.Gruner--BBZ)