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How much is the salary of an average Korean per month?

What is the salary of Koreans? Maybe people in China think they make a lot of money. Absolutely wrong! ! Generally speaking, for people who work in large companies such as Samsung and LG, the salary of an ordinary member is about 30 million won, and when you reach the level of section leader, it is about 50 million won. Generally, Koreans start as ordinary members in the company, and it takes at least 3 years to be promoted to the agent level, and then it takes at least 4-5 years to go from agent to section leader (if you are lucky). This is the salary of a large company. If it is a small and medium-sized enterprise, it is generally around 1 million won per month, and it is common to pay as little as 700,000-800,000 won. Don't think that all Koreans can live a high-level life in big companies. If you want to enter a large Korean company, you really have to fight your way through it. First you need to submit your resume, then a written test, and finally an interview. A large Korean company has a lot of investment from China. In their latest recruitment, the person in charge of the human resources department said personally that 28,000 people submitted their resumes, and 800 people were interviewed, and the final ratio was 3:1. Conduct interview eliminations. From these figures, you can roughly infer that very few people work in large companies. What a cruel competition! According to reports from their TV station, the proportion of the labor force absorbed by South Korea's top so-called large enterprises only accounts for about 16%. It is conceivable that most people still have to struggle painfully to make ends meet. Large companies in South Korea are very friendly and generous when recruiting new members. Some companies even send flowers to the homes of newly hired members to express their congratulations. It is so warm and considerate that it is enough for everyone who has just graduated from school. Students are moved to tears, and it inspires them to vow to devote themselves to the company and fight for life. But when you reach your forties, things are different. Generally, when you are over 40 years old, the company will let you go. Because, as the years of working in the company increase, the salary will also increase. If you do not have strong strength and work performance, then of course you will be a burden to the company, and the boss will of course tell you to get out. Just imagine, among Koreans at this age, some are old and some are young. Losing their jobs means that the financial backbone of the entire family has collapsed. Therefore, many people have fallen from high-rise apartment buildings or thrown themselves into the Han River. Thinking back on the glory of being a "new member" back then, people who were kicked out of the company would be really disappointed. "The reason is that only the new ones laugh, who hears the old ones crying?"

If you buy an ordinary house in Seoul with a construction area of ??90 square meters, the price of a house far away from the city center is generally at least 300 million. Therefore, most Koreans (it is said that 80%) do not own their own houses, and they live in renting other people's houses. For 9,999 out of 10,000 Koreans, those mansions that appear in Korean dramas will always be just beautiful images that may appear on television. Perhaps my compatriots who have never been to South Korea and truly experienced life in South Korea will think that their ordinary lives are at least above the well-off standard of our countrymen. But I have to tell you, this is another big illusion! You don’t know what percentage of their citizens still live in dark, damp, semi-underground houses! !

In my judgment, people who can live a well-off life in our country must be called "rich" in South Korea. Here is another little story for everyone. I was working out at a fitness center near Sinchon, Seoul. The owner (a Korean in his 50s) wanted to talk to me from the first time I went there, but I didn't take the initiative to talk to him. Finally one day, the old man gathered up the courage, walked up to me and asked the first question: "Are you Chinese?" I answered yes. The second question: "You must be a rich man in China, right?" I replied, "No, my parents are ordinary working-class people." The old man started to look confused, because he thought how could we Chinese afford it? Money comes for a fitness center like this. I smiled and told him that I actually think there are many such fitness centers in China, and I think the prices are similar to ordinary fitness clubs in China. I also added that the places I went to in China were much more expensive than this. After that, the shocked boss asked no more questions. Maybe fellow Chinese students living in South Korea have been asked many similar questions?

I feel that most Koreans are like frogs in a well, especially middle-aged Koreans. They are still immersed in the dream of the glory of the "Four Asian Tigers" in the past and don't know when to wake up, and don't know if it is possible. They will wake up, so they show special arrogance. Many of them think that South Korea is a developed country like the United States. But as far as I know, South Korea's position in the United Nations is only "a relatively developed country among underdeveloped countries." Of course, most of the Koreans who have been to China have a very strong desire to stay and work and live in China. They have to admit that there are not many development prospects in South Korea.

One of the social problems caused by successive years of economic sluggishness and youth unemployment in South Korea since the outbreak of the financial crisis is that the average age of young people getting married has been greatly delayed, and the birth rate has dropped significantly. It is said that the birth rate in OECD countries is now The lowest among them is 1:19.

This means that young people in South Korea who are around 30 years old are unlikely to receive sufficient pension benefits when they retire, because if there is no new labor force to supplement them, who will support these retired people? Coupled with South Korea's original lack of resources, how much development potential their country has is a huge question mark hanging in front of their Blue House.

Therefore, most of South Korea's large companies have recently made strategic shifts to develop in China. Because without the development of China's huge domestic demand market, they would not have much room for survival! To put it bluntly, although they look down on China and the Chinese people now, they still want to make money and survive by relying on the development of our strong China. Therefore, based on this, we can at least be proud in front of a small country like South Korea! ! My fellow Chinese compatriots, when China becomes stronger, that is when we Chinese people will be proud and proud overseas. No foreigners will ask us when they see us: "Are you Japanese?" Such questions hurt our national self-esteem. ! Every Chinese has the responsibility to work hard for the strength of our country! Do you still remember what our beloved Premier Zhou said: "Read for the rise of China"? ! When I was in China, I had never had such a strong sense of wanting our country to be truly prosperous and powerful. Sometimes I even scolded our country and complained about all the shortcomings of our people. But when I came to South Korea, I would occasionally see our five-star red flag and hear our national anthem, and I would be moved to tears. Because it excites me and makes me deeply feel my responsibility and pride as a Chinese, really.