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Some economists say Oh and Lee are afraid of a potential surge in public demands for welfare programs. "Conservatives fear the very word 'free' may spread," said Kang Seong-hoon, who teaches economics at Sungshin Women's University in Seoul. Free lunch for all of the city's 810,000 elementary and middle school students would cost $370 million annually. The alternative
-- feeding half of students at all levels including high school -- would cover 600,000 and cost $280 million, according to the Seoul Metropolitan Government. Playing down the difference between the price tags of the two programs, Myongji University political scientist Shin Yul blamed Oh for excessive fiscal austerity when his city annually spends $20 billion. However, mayoral spokesman Lee Jong-hyun said free lunch is a matter of principle. "If the principle is violated, a dangerous logic of free rides will appear in other areas and threaten sustainable welfare," he said. Some conservatives have described supporters of universal free lunch as leftists, a term often associated with North Korean sympathizers. The debate is likely to play out in presidential and parliamentary elections next year. Opponents risk being portrayed as cold-hearted for refusing to expand free lunch for students, but they may be solidifying their political base by signaling a conservative approach to welfare. "Welfare and North Korea will be two major topics in next year's elections," said Kim Sung-joo, a political science professor at Seoul's Sungkyunkwan University. "The free lunch debate is raising welfare questions in voters' minds well ahead of elections."
[Associated
Press;
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