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75% of South Korean youth want to leave, 80% think Korea is hell

South Korean survey: 75% of South Korean youth want to leave

According to South Korean media reports, the latest survey shows that young people in South Korea feel more uncomfortable in life than the adult generation, and among the same generation, young women feel more uncomfortable than men. Nearly 80% of South Korean women said they wanted to leave. Most Korean women are aware of the seriousness of gender equality and security threats in South Korea.

According to data released on the 15th by the Korea Institute of women's policy, 80% of young people aged 19-34 think that Korean society is "hell Korea". Among the 35-59-year-old adults, 64% thought that Korean society was "hell Korea". The study is the result of a survey of 5000 South Korean nationals aged 15 to 59 years old and analyzed by age and gender.

The depression score of 5000 adult men and women in the survey was 2.64 (full score of 4 points). The anger index indicates emotional experiences such as melancholy or unhappiness, anger, grievance, improper, etc. Among them, young women scored 2.79, male 2.53, adult male 2.58, and female 2.66. Female's depression index was relatively high, and young women felt the highest degree of depression among the four groups.

In addition, the sense of discomfort of young men was higher than that of young men, especially in the sense of social discomfort.

Women also see South Korea as unfair more than men. 86.1% of women and 78.4% of men answered "yes" to the question of "whether Korean society is unfair".

About the question of 'want to leave Korea', 75% of young people want to leave Korea to live, and 65% of adults answer 'yes'. Among them, 79.1% of young women expressed positive attitude towards this.

On the other hand, young men and women have different opinions on the opinion that "too many men occupy decision-making positions in Parliament and other places". 87.6% of young women agree with this analysis, while the identity rate of young men is 43.1%, which is lower than 63% of adult men.

The analysis points out that, regardless of age and gender, South Korea needs a system that can solve the problems of women's perceived differences and inequalities.