Meet the typical South Korean millennial: educated, overqualified for the job market, and part of the 'kangaroo tribe' that can't afford to leave their parents' homes

Young South Koreans in traditional clothing participate in a traditional Confucian coming-of-age ceremony on May 20, 2019 in Seoul, South Korea.
Young South Koreans don traditional clothing to celebrate in a Confucian coming-of-age ceremony.
  • Almost 70% of South Korea's millennials have college degrees.
  • But they're overqualified for the labor market, resulting in a high unemployment rate.
  • Known as the "kangaroo tribe," many still live with their parents because of high housing costs.
At 28, Kwon Joonyeop is the kind of guy most Korean teenagers want to become.
kwon joonyeop
Kwon, 28, swam for his varsity team at Yonsei University, one of South Korea's top colleges.

Kwon graduated in 2022 from Yonsei University, a top college where he swam on the varsity team and earned a double degree in physical education and public administration. He lives in Gangnam — Seoul's glitzy city center — in a four-room apartment that his family has owned for generations.

He works as a data analyst at a multinational tech firm, in a country where stable, white-collar jobs are glorified as the key to a good life. On weekends, he wins swimming competitions and is set to represent Seoul in under-30 tournaments.

But like most young and unmarried South Koreans, he lives with his parents, and despite earning more than the national average, he won't even consider buying his own home for the next 10 years. If he saves enough, maybe he can afford a car by then, he said.

"It feels a bit hopeless, like we are the damned ones," Kwon said.

Hong Seo-yoon, 36, manages a nonprofit for disabled rights in Korea and runs advocacy classes at Seoul National University in her spare time for around $3,700 a month. She's worked as an anchor at the Korean Broadcasting System and as the founder of multiple NGOs. Hong, who uses a wheelchair, also sits on the board of several Korean nonprofits for disability access.

She spent her life savings and took out a hefty loan to buy her first home in Seoul — a 600-square-foot apartment built 30 years ago — for $300,000 in 2019. Now, though, with her current salary and mortgage interest piling up, Hong told Insider she's worried about her financial future.

Kwon and Hong belong to Generation MZ, a collective term for South Korea's millennials and Gen Zers, who often get grouped together for their digital fluency and outlook on life.

Generation MZ — anyone born between 1980 and 2005 — accounts for almost a third of the country's population of around 52 million people.

It makes up Korea's most educated generation and is the country's first youth generation known for speaking up about social issues and the climate.

Generation MZ is also characterized by intense financial anxiety, as young Koreans like Hong and Kwon see their life goals drifting further away while housing, transportation, and education prices reach record highs.

Insider spoke with five South Koreans of Generation MZ, as well as finance and generational experts, to gain a better understanding of the generation. 

Known as the "kangaroo tribe," most young, unmarried South Koreans still live with their parents due to increasingly unaffordable housing.
high rise apartment in seoul
Housing is increasingly unaffordable in South Korea as prices and bank interest rates continue to rise.

Only 12.7% of Generation MZ singles and 36.6% MZ married couples are homeowners, according to data from Statistics Korea, the government Census agency.

By comparison, 47.8% of US millennials own homes, per an analysis of 2020 Census data by Apartment List. US millennials comprise an older age range of 27- to 42-year-olds.

That's not to say Koreans don't want to own homes. A 2020 survey of 2,889 Koreans in their 20s found that nearly 95% think purchasing a house is essential. Kwon, the data analyst, said owning property is enshrined as a sign of status for most Koreans.

But Kwon, who makes $60,000 a year, doesn't know if he'll ever buy his own house.

"In terms of my limit, if I'm not married, maybe I'll move out and rent a place when I'm 35 or 36," Kwon said. He said he saves 70% of his income by staying with his parents.

The average home sale price in Seoul was $876,215 in 2022, compared to average salaries of $26,600 to $37,660 for Koreans between the ages of 25 to 39, the Ministry of Employment and Labor has reported.

With soaring housing costs and rising bank interest rates, many young and unmarried South Koreans don't have the funds to seriously consider being homeowners. The Korea Financial Times reported that middle-income households can afford only 2.6% of the houses in Seoul. 

It's why they call themselves the "kangaroo tribe," a reference to baby kangaroos, or joeys, known for being late to leave their mother's pouch. At least 42.5% of Generation MZ still live with their parents, according to a 2022 report by Statistics Korea.

In Korea, it's socially acceptable to sacrifice one's independence for the practical gain of avoiding rental costs.

For Hong, the nonprofit founder, surging rental prices pushed her to take the plunge and buy her apartment with a loan. She didn't have the option of staying with her parents, who live in Changwon, a city on Korea's southeastern coast, and rental costs were rising every week in 2019, she said.

"I was so afraid that my landlord would keep asking me to increase the rental cost," she said.

College tuition is relatively inexpensive, and nearly 70% of South Korea's millennials have college degrees.
Park Minjun, 25, is a master's student in international relations.
Park Minjun, 25, is a master's student in international relations.

In South Korea, annual college tuition averages around $5,000 a year, compared to an average of $9,377 for in-state and $27,279 for out-of-state annual tuition in the US, according to the Education Data Initiative. 

Less than 30% of college students in Korea are financing their education with student loans, Eyal Victor Mamou, the CEO of the Korean consultancy Koisra, told Insider.

Park Min-jun, 25, is working on his master's degree; he rents a studio apartment in Seoul for $6,000 a year and spends around $5,400 on tuition a year. His parents live in South Korea's second-largest city, Busan, and support him with part of his expenses, he told Insider.

Most of Park's friends at his college, Seoul National University, receive cash from their parents to tide them over while they study, he said.

"The student-loan problem in Korea is not as serious as in the US, where most college graduates have to start their social lives with a heavy debt," Kim Seong-kon, a professor emeritus in cultural studies and the former dean of international affairs at Seoul National University, told Insider.

Park chips in by earning $1,100 a month waiting tables at a Korean barbecue restaurant, tutoring undergraduate students, and working as a research assistant.

He's got enough left over to spend on occasional trips to nearby holiday locations like Jeju Island, which is just a short flight from Seoul. He's currently saving up for a vacation to Indonesia. "If we had student loans at US levels, that would cause social hysteria," he said. "It's common for people to try to save up while in school."

But that also comes with a downside: Many millennials are overqualified for the labor market. The unemployment rate among young people in Korea is almost twice as high as it is in the US.
ob seekers looking at notices while searching for employment during a jobs fair in Seoul
Young South Korean job seekers are faced with rising unemployment rates in a highly competitive society.

As of February, the unemployment rate for people between 20 and 29 in South Korea was 7%, according to a report by Statistics Korea. That's an increase of 1.2 percentage points from January.

By comparison, the unemployment rate in the US for 25- to 34-year-olds was 3.9% in February, according to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics

The Korean labor market doesn't have enough high-paying jobs sought by young graduates, Sang Kim, the director of communications at the Korea Economic Institute, told Insider.

"In the past, people worked hard to get into prestigious universities, which guaranteed prestigious jobs," she said. "But today, the reality is that even with degrees from top schools, people are having a hard time finding the high-quality jobs they want."

The idea that university acceptance guaranteed success was so prevalent in Korea that it was dubbed the "golden-ticket syndrome" by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, a United Nations observer. 

Park is pursuing a master's degree in international relations. He's already preparing his backup options if he can't find a job with his desired salary — between $30,000 and $40,000 a year — and is looking into Ph.D. programs. Postgraduate degree holders earn an average of $53,700 a year in Korea, per Statistics Korea.

"The jobs are definitely there, I just don't know if the pay is right," he said.

With houses so expensive and high-paying jobs in short supply, young Koreans are increasingly taking out huge loans.
South Korea-A Screen shows the prices of bitcoin at a virtual currency exchange store in Seoul, South Korea.
The younger generation often turns to investments to escape the rat race in South Korea.

Despite Korea having low levels of student debt, more young Koreans are now taking loans, said Mamou, the Koisra CEO. He estimates that around 35% of loans in Korea are given to Generation MZ borrowers.

Korea's younger generation is increasingly resorting to "bittoo," slang for taking a big loan to invest in stocks, in hopes of striking it rich.

Sam Kyungmoon Son, an adjunct lecturer at Kyungwoon University and an independent consultant at the management-consulting firm VisionWise, previously told Insider's Cheryl Teh that the practice poses a huge risk, but young Koreans are so desperate, they take the leap anyway.

Park said some of his friends borrowed several years' worth of salary in 2022 to invest in cryptocurrency and subsequently lost their life savings when the market crashed in May.

"I think that demonstrates where Generation MZ belongs, the financial anxiety that belongs to this generation," he said. 

Young South Koreans are the world's biggest spenders on luxury goods, in part because they can't buy property.
South Korea Chanel
For many younger South Koreans, looking affluent to others matters a lot to them.

In 2022, total personal-luxury-goods spending by South Koreans increased by 24%, a recent study by Morgan Stanley found, as reported in The Korea Times.

Shinsegae, one of Korea's biggest luxury-department-store chains, said Generation MZ accounted for almost 40% of total luxury sales in 2021, The Korea Times reported.

Young Koreans tend to gravitate toward luxury items as "psychological compensation" for being unable to afford undeniable symbols of success, like property, Kim, the professor, said.

"Since they won't be able to own a home due to the astronomical real-estate prices in South Korea, they buy a luxury car instead," he said.

This generation's fixation on brand-name items is due to a "flex" culture, or buying luxury goods as status symbols, he added.

While Korea's older generations saved more to survive tough economic situations, younger people see luxury items more as investments that bring them joy or satisfaction, Kwak Geum-joo, a psychology professor at Seoul National University, told The Korea Times. 

More than 60% of 1,000 Korean adults surveyed between 2020 and 2021 said they felt it was "fairly important" or "very important" to be seen as rich, a study by Economic Affairs found.

Others in Generation MZ have taken a reverse approach to handling the bleak cost-of-living situation and are saving as much as they can.
Kim So-hee
Kim So-hee works at Samsung Electronics as an engineer.

Economic uncertainty has birthed an opposing movement to "flex culture" that's gaining steam among Generation MZ Koreans: "jjantech," or money-saving investment. Essentially, it means scrimping however they can, like skipping meals or walking 10,000 steps a day to earn 7 cents.

The typical Korean in Generation MZ who earns a salary near the national average saves around 44% of their income, Mamou said.

"I try to save as much as I can," Kim So-hee, a 26-year-old engineer at Samsung Electronics, told Insider.

To cut down on food expenses, she eats the free meals that her company provides during weekdays for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. The practice helps Kim save two-thirds of her monthly income while living alone in a rented apartment near her workplace.

Park Su-ah, a 25-year-old accounts assistant, told Insider she saves around 70% of her $20,000 annual salary.

"We have a common saying in Korea: You have to pay to breathe," she said.

She dreams of taking a weeklong vacation in France, for which she's budgeted $800, apart from flight costs. Park saves more by living with her parents in Goyang-si, one of Seoul's satellite cities, and takes an hour-long bus ride every day to work at a publishing house in Seoul.

Like many of their global counterparts, South Korean millennials are getting married later than previous generations.
wedding photoshoot on the road
Fewer South Koreans of Generation MZ think of marriage as a necessity.

More than 50% of South Koreans in their 20s and 30s no longer view marriage as a necessity, a nationwide social survey conducted by Statistics Korea in 2022 found.

Almost a third of the survey's respondents said a lack of money is one reason they don't want to get married.

Korea's marriage rate hit record lows in 2022, with 192,000 couples getting married among a population of 51 million people, per The Korea Herald. Those who do get married are getting married later.

"It's been traditionally expected that individuals get married in their late 20s or early 30s, after completing their education and establishing a stable career," Mamou said. "However, in recent years, these expectations have become weaker due to economic challenges."

None of the young Koreans who spoke to Insider have concrete plans to get married, though several have partners.

At 36, Hong, the part-time lecturer, is in no rush to get engaged.

"If you ask me if my current relationship is similar to the role of my family's, it's not," she said.

Park, the master's student, said many Korean men give themselves a financial checklist before their wedding.

"Guys who want to get married are especially anxious about saving up — they need to complete this checklist, buying a house, buying a car," he said. "It's a lot of stress, and it's all financial goals."

With falling ma

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