Korean Demographics

Fertility rates in South Korea are the lowest on earth. An aging population and falling birthrates spells trouble for South Korea as their “population-death-rates” exceed their “population-birth-rates” resulting in South Korea running out of people. Korean government spending (trying to curb the low-birth problem) reached over $188-Billion USD by the year 2020. But trying to provide incentives to couples to have more children has largely been in vain (as the Korean population continues to plummet).

Pursuit of Education

Korean parents want to give their children an “elite education” believing it is critical to a child’s future job opportunities and happiness. But this “pursuit of education” is not without high cost as typical Korean families will spend up to 50% of their household income every year on education. It is because of this huge “financial burden” that most couples can only afford to have one child. This leads toward the (national population crisis) when birth rates fall below the needed population replacement rates. [It must be noted that any nation whose population “birth rates” fall below population “replacement rates” is headed toward extinction!]

Falling Marriage Rates

The marriage rate in South Korea has fallen by 43% in the last 20-years. Many Korean women are choosing careers over having children and forego “motherhood” entirely. The competition for good paying jobs is so high that many young men were forced to work part-time jobs and thus have small prospects for obtaining a “living-wage” in Korea (which is needed for starting a family).

See the link “Korea’s Population Decline” for more details.

More demographic information can be seen at the wiki link: “Demographics of South Korea

Hell Joseon

Many Korean young people have labeled their own country as being “Hell Joseon” which is a term describing the anxieties and discontentment associated with high unemployment and stressful working conditions found within modern South Korean society.

Sampo Generation

The Sampo Generation is related to the “Three-Giving-Up-Generation” where young Koreans are forced to give up “courtship” and “marriage” and “having children” because social and economic pressures existing in Korea. Not only do Korean young people feel they are forced to abandon courtship and marriage and having children but also feel that they have little hope of obtaining a financial security and achieving home-ownership. The cost of tuition and housing and living expenses are extremely high in South Korea, giving young people little hope for a bright future (regardless of how hard they work).

International Korean Migrant Population

Currently the number of Korea migrants living outside of South Korea exceeds the population of the entire nation of Israel. This is a huge number (reflecting how many South Koreans are seeking a better life and better opportunities outside of their own nation).

See the link “KMI2 Homepage” for more details about Koreans living in diaspora.

Problem Worth Solving

The problem of declining Korean population and hopelessness that is found among Korean young people is a problem worth solving. Koreans are industrious and innovative and particularly suited to venture abroad (outside Korea) to engage in civilization building.

Nations like Russia (for example) understand the importance of having people because people are producers and are the creators of economy.

Proverbs 14:28 (NASB95)
28 In a multitude of people is a king’s glory, But in the dearth of people is a prince’s ruin.

People are not just “consumers” or “weeds to be culled” as liberals view them, but in fact humans are necessary for creating wealth and growing food and making products and everything that is related to prosperity on earth. The bible says that a multitude of people is a king’s glory but the dearth of people is a prince’s ruin. This means without a strong and growing population; a nation will come to “ruination” because people are the source of all national prosperity.

See the link “Liberals Hate Humans” for more details.

It is our goal to utilize Koreans as civilization builders to expand into remote regions of the earth to build living systems which will produce unlimited wealth and food and products to sustain human populations in any region of the earth. See the link “Developing Remote Regions” for more details.

We are developing an “Automated Living System” that enables each family to produce all of the food and products and energy needed to sustain them (even off-the-grid). This “Automated Living System” has great advantages for families because it greatly reduces the “curse of Adam” by enabling each family to prosper without the constant labor necessary to survive within a globalized economic system. This will provide more free time for men to mentor their children rather than laboring incessantly just to feed their families. Women will not have to abandon procreation because all of their needs are met without them trying to join the curse of Adam (in perverse manner) laboring like a man.

In short, we provide hope for young people enabling them to prosper greatly without all of the social pressures they currently endure under a centralized global economic model.

Financial Security

Our automated system is a “producing asset” meaning that it produces energy and grows food and creates products continually and thus produces a continual income for the owners. Despite high building costs, the system can quickly pay for itself because it is more than just a home to provide housing but also creates income. Thus, our young couples have a good hope for feeding their families and do not have to be concerned about limiting family size to one child only because of the high cost of living expenses that currently limit them within the centralized global economic system.