Health and Welfare Policy Forum

Multilocality and the Perceived Impact of Local Policies

  • Author

    Ko, Jayee

  • Page

    31-43

  • PubDate

    2026. 05.

  • Language

    kor

In light of increasing multi-local living, this study investigates residents’ awareness and utilization of local public assistance, as well as their acceptance of alternative institutional arrangements, such as the recognition of multiple addresses. The analysis draws on data from the “Survey of Perceptions of Local Population Change and the Perceived Impact of Local Population Policy.” The findings suggest that, although awareness of local population and welfare policies is widespread among residents, actual utilization remains limited. Respondents frequently perceived the level of public assistance available in their local areas to be lower than that provided in other municipalities. Meanwhile, multi-local living was found to shape residents’ awareness and utilization of local programs, as well as their perceptions of program effectiveness. Individuals who regularly move between two or more residences were less aware of assistance programs provided in the locality where their permanent addresses were registered and were more likely to face constraints in accessing services tied to that location. Because the administration of local public assistance remains based on registered residence, it fails to account for the needs arising from the rise of multi-local living, leading to distortions in both access to, and perception of the effectiveness of, local government services. These findings suggest the need to consider how administrative services should be designed and delivered so that they better reflect the realities of multi-local residence.

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