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- S. Korea unveils first graphic cigarette warnings
- US joins with South Korea, Japan in bid to deter North Korea
- LPGA golfer Chun In-gee finally back in action
- S. Korea won’t be top seed in final World Cup qualification round
- US men’s soccer misses 2nd straight Olympics
- US back on track in qualifying with 4-0 win over Guatemala
- High-intensity workout injuries spawn cottage industry
- CDC expands range of Zika mosquitoes into parts of Northeast
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No Country for South Korea’s Old
“For S. Korea’s old, a return to poverty as Confucian filial piety weakens”
Washington Post article also says the percentage of children who think
they should look after their parents has shrunk from 90 to 37 in just 15-yrs.
“There’s a dark side to South Korea’s 50-year rise to riches: The graying generation that is most responsible for that ascent is living in relative poverty.”
The disturbing piece, titled “For South Korea’s old, a return to poverty as Confucian filial piety weakens,” written by Chico Harlan, was published in The Washington Post recently. He says, in short, that what Koreans call “Hyodo” is something of the past.
Some of the points he made were downright brutal and shocking – “In a fast-paced nation famous for its high achievers and its big spending on private tutors and luxury goods, half of South Korea’s elderly are poor, the highest rate in the industrialized world,” he wrote.
The article also brought up the fact that over the past 15 years, the percentage of children who think they should look after their parents has shrunk from 90 percent to 37 percent, according to government polls. And the elderly suicide rate has more than tripled since 2000.
One retiree in Seoul, Park Jang-su was quoted as saying, “The family has crumbled. That’s why we are dying alone.”
Following is the link to the Washington Post article.