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Property prices in Seoul: A threat to national survival?

Unlike many in her generation, Woo Ye-wan was able to purchase a sleek apartment in southeastern Seoul three years ago at age 27. But as she cuts a slice of German butter cake into bite-size pieces with kitchen scissors, she laments that it’s not the kind of place where she could ever raise a family. 

Her minimalist studio flat is just 450 square feet, with a kitchen counter only a few short steps from her dining table, which is only a couple of steps from her bed. Ms. Woo, who works long hours as a nurse, worries that the investment – which amounted to 15 times her annual salary – might not be the launching pad she had hoped.

“These days, I’ve reached the point where I just hope I don’t end up losing money on it,” she says.

Why We Wrote This

In South Korea, President Lee Jae-myung sees housing affordability as top priority, talking about it as an existential challenge for the country. For many Koreans, finding a place to live is a major factor when making big life decisions like getting married and planning to raise a family.

Many young Koreans are glum about their future, with housing at the center of a generation’s angst. This is why the country’s president, Lee Jae-myung, is waging a policy war on the housing market. Throughout his first year in office, he has blamed property speculation and greed for Seoul’s runaway housing prices, and promised to do everything he can to fix it. 

President Lee even went so far as listing his own Seoul apartment for sale at below market value. The message he wanted to send was that real estate is about finding a home, and is not simply an investment vehicle. He says South Korea has turned into a “property-speculation republic.” And the president vows to “eradicate” the problem, in order to fuel “South Korea’s great transformation.”

In a nation with the lowest birth rate in the world, and where many view homeownership as a prerequisite for raising a family, this affordability crisis is seen as an existential problem, jeopardizing South Korea’s social and economic stability.

President Lee said in a social media post earlier this year, “Don’t you see the blood and tears of millions of young people who are giving up on marriage and childbirth due to the high housing costs?” 

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