Kids later than sooner. South Korean women freeze eggs as child-rearing
costs surge
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[May 13, 2022]
By Cynthia Kim
SEOUL (Reuters) - In South Korea, fewer
women are having children and those who do are in no rush. The sky-high
costs of housing and education make financial security a must. Social
mores also dictate the need to be married.
Lim Eun-young, a 34-year-old public servant, says she is not ready to
start a family due to the costs and as she only began dating her
boyfriend several months ago. But worried that her biological clock is
ticking, she had some of her eggs frozen in November.
Lim was one of about 1,200 unmarried single women who underwent the
procedure last year at CHA Medical Center - a number that has doubled
over two years. CHA is South Korea's largest fertility clinic chain with
about 30% of the IVF market.
"It's a big relief and it gives me peace of mind to know that I have
healthy eggs frozen right here," she said.
Freezing eggs to buy reproductive time is an option increasingly
explored by women worldwide. But in South Korea, which has the dubious
distinction of having one of the world's lowest fertility rates, the
dramatic jump in women using CHA's services throws into sharp relief the
economic burdens and social constraints leading to decisions to delay or
even forgo having children.
The fertility rate - the average number of children born to a woman over
her reproductive life - in South Korea was just 0.81 last year. That
compares with an average rate of 1.59 for OECD countries in 2020.
That's also despite enormous sums spent by South Korean authorities on
subsidies and perks for families with children. The government budgeted
46.7 trillion won ($37 billion) last year to fund policies aimed at
tackling the country's low birth rate.
Much of the blame for South Korean reticence to have children is laid on
a highly competitive and expensive education system that makes cram
schools and private tutoring a fact of life for most kids from a young
age.
"We hear from married couples and watch reality TV shows about how
expensive it is to raise kids in terms of education costs and
everything, and all these worries translate to fewer marriages and
babies," said Lim.
Housing costs have also surged. An average apartment in Seoul, for
instance, costs an estimated 19 years of South Korea's median annual
household income, up from 11 years in 2017.
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Kim Ji-hyun, a professor at Cha Fertility Center, checks a patient
at the clinic, in Bundang, South Korea, April 30, 2022. Picture
taken April 30, 2022. REUTERS/Heo Ran
Cho So-Young, a 32-year-old nurse at
CHA who plans to freeze her eggs this coming July, is also keen to
get to a better place financially before having a child.
"If I get married now and give birth, I can't give my baby the kind
of environment I had when I grew up...I want better housing, a
better neighbourhood and better food to eat," she said.
But even when finances are less of a consideration,
being married is seen as a prerequisite to having children in South
Korea. Just 2% of births in South Korea occur out of wedlock
compared to an average of 41% for OECD countries.
In fact, while single South Korean women are able to freeze their
eggs, they can't legally proceed with a sperm donation and the
implanting of an embryo unless married - an issue thrust into the
spotlight by Sayuri Fujita, a Japanese celebrity and single mother
based in South Korea who had to go back to Japan for a sperm
donation.
That needs to change, argues Jung Jae-hoon, a social welfare studies
professor at Seoul Women's University, noting marriages in South
Korea dropped to a record low of 192,500 last year. That's down
around 40% from a decade earlier. Even when looking at marriage
levels in 2019 to discount the effect of the pandemic, the decline
is still a huge 27%.
"The least the government can do is to not get in the way of those
out there who are willing to shoulder the financial burden of having
a baby," he said.
Even more worrying are the statistics showing a sharp drop-off in
willingness to have children at all.
Some 52% of South Koreans in their 20s don't plan to have children
when they get married, a massive jump from 29% in 2015, according to
a survey conducted in 2020 by the country's gender and family
ministry.
($1 = 1,276 won)
(Reporting by Cynthia Kim; Additional reporting by Do-Gyun Kim and
Dae-woung Kim; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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