In my view, this is fundamentally an issue of inequality and education. In South Korea, mandatory military conscription has had a significant impact on gender relations and workplace expectations. Historically, some hiring practices have reflected assumptions about men’s and women’s roles, and certain forms of male privilege have been normalised within society. Many women will marry men who earn less than them as long as the dual income makes them sufficient to live together. With the status quo, neither men nor women in the low-income threshold would want to marry. How would they buy a house and make a family? lol
WittyPolitico on
But they have to own a home.
Fwellimort on
I swear everyone has a partner in the streets in Korea. If dating is hard in Korea then it’s impossible elsewhere.
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In my view, this is fundamentally an issue of inequality and education. In South Korea, mandatory military conscription has had a significant impact on gender relations and workplace expectations. Historically, some hiring practices have reflected assumptions about men’s and women’s roles, and certain forms of male privilege have been normalised within society. Many women will marry men who earn less than them as long as the dual income makes them sufficient to live together. With the status quo, neither men nor women in the low-income threshold would want to marry. How would they buy a house and make a family? lol
But they have to own a home.
I swear everyone has a partner in the streets in Korea. If dating is hard in Korea then it’s impossible elsewhere.