Health and Welfare Policy Forum

Demographic Shifts, Social Risks, and Policy Responses

  • Author

    Cho, Sungeun

  • Page

    17-31

  • PubDate

    2026. 04.

  • Language

    kor

While population remains, as in the past, a factor of primary importance for any nation or society, childbirth, a key determinant of population size, is predominantly an individual choice and therefore difficult to control at a communal or social level. That said, it should also be noted that individuals’ decisions about having children do get affected by the socioeconomic environment, much of which is a central concern for population policies. Across welfare states around the world, including Korea’s, responses to population change can be broadly categorized into either adaptive or mitigative. In Korea, both types of policies have been introduced and expanded since the 2000s, but they have largely failed to produce meaningful results. What matters for a welfare state in its response to population change is that it reorients the focus and paradigm of economic and social policies from growth to balanced quality-of-life enhancement. As “shrinking” becomes a reality across social, economic, and cultural domains, it is essential to respond with targeted and focused measures. In these times of contraction―a structural transition a society as a whole must navigate as it grapples with long-term demographic challenges―it behooves us to turn adversity into opportunity, and doing so will require a paradigm shift that redirects society away from the growth-first imperative toward stability, sustainability, and quality of life.

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공공누리 공공저작물 자유 이용허락, 출처표시, 상업적 이용 금지, 변경금지
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