Roundup: S.Korea's young generation faces rising debt, with elderly having less living costs
Xinhua,December 21, 2017 Adjust font size:
SEOUL, Dec. 21 (Xinhua) -- South Korea's younger generation is facing rising debt, while the older generation has less living costs, boosting worry about the prolonged low birth rate amid the aging population, data showed Thursday.
According to data jointly released by Statistics Korea, the Bank of Korea (BOK) and the Financial Supervisory Service (FSS), householders aged under 30 have an average debt of 23.85 million won (22,000 U.S. dollars) as of the end of March.
It was the lowest debt in the age group, but it marked the fastest growth rate of 41.9 percent compared with 16.81 million won (15,600 U.S. dollars) tallied a year earlier.
Debts owed by householders in their 30s averaged 68.72 million won as of end-March, up 16.1 percent from a year ago. It was the second-highest expansion in the all age group.
Household debts averaged 7,022,000 won (65,000 U.S. dollars) for all ages as of end-March, up 4.5 percent from a year earlier.
Financial soundness worsened the most among those in their 20s and 30s. The ratio of financial debts to disposable income jumped by 23.2 percentage points in the cited period among householders aged under 30.
It was the fastest increase in the age group, followed by householders in their 30s who saw the ratio surge by 12.6 percentage points in the same period.
The ratio for all households added 4 percentage points over the year to 121.4 percent as of end-March as financial debts grew at a faster pace than disposable income.
The growing debts facing the younger generation came amid mounting concern about a high unemployment rate.
The official jobless rate among youths aged 15 to 29 was 9.2 percent in November, but the sentiment rate including discouraged job seekers and those doing part-time jobs against their will stood at 21.4 percent last month.
According to some of local media speculations, almost half of college graduates here failed to get a decent job for long even after graduation. Many of college graduates were estimated to live on debts or live on part-time jobs to study and prepare to enter a big corporation.
Amid difficulties in finding a job, South Korean youths delayed marriage and postponed having baby, dragging down the already low birth rate further. Low birth rate will pull down potential growth rate of the South Korean economy as it reduces the number of working age population and weighs down on private consumption.
Meanwhile, the older generation struggled to get proper living costs after retirement. According to the joint data, nearly two thirds of after-retirement householders had difficulty because of lack of living costs.
About 40 percent of families having retired householders lacked proper living expenses, while 22.4 percent was very lack of appropriate living costs.
The least living cost for after-retirement households was estimated at 1.92 million won (1,770 U.S. dollars) a month, while the proper living cost was estimated at 2.76 million won (2,550 U.S. dollars).
The expected retirement age of householders was believed to be 66.8 years old, but the actual retirement age was 62.1 years old on average, the data showed.
The shortage of living expenses for the older generation boosted worry about the population aging. South Korea has one of the world's fastest-aging population.
South Korea's government unveiled a series of measures to offer retirement pensions, but the annuity fell far short of appropriate living costs for retirees.
It already became a serious social problem. In addition, the rising number of retirees would increase tax burden for the younger generation already struggling to get a job and repay rising debts. Enditem