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South Korea army faces crisis over shortage of young men

South Korea army faces crisis over shortage of young men

Telegraph3 days ago
South Korea's military has shrunk by 20 per cent in the past six years because there are not enough young men in the country.
There are now just 450,000 troops, largely due to a sharp drop in the population of males of enlistment age for mandatory service in the country with the world's lowest birthrate, a report said on Sunday.
The dramatic decline in the pool of available males for military service is also causing a shortfall in the number of officers and could result in operational difficulty if it continues, the defence ministry said in the report.
South Korea's military has steadily declined since the early 2000s when it had about 690,000 soldiers. The pace accelerated during the late 2010s and there were about 563,000 active-duty soldiers and officers in 2019.
North Korea is believed to have an active-duty military of about 1.2 million, according to the latest estimate by the defence ministry in 2022.
In the period between 2019 and 2025, the population of 20-year-old males declined by 30 per cent to 230,000, according to government data, the age when most men who pass a physical exam enlist for military service, which is now 18 months long.
The military has cited improved capabilities as a key reason for shortening service periods, made possible by a military alliance with the United States and the development of a defence industry that has become a major exporter of arms.
Able-bodied men served 36 months in 1953 when the Korean War ended in an armistice.
South Korea's defence budget, at more than 61 trillion won (£32.6 billion) in 2025, is larger than the estimated size of North Korea's economy.
Still, the military is 50,000 soldiers short of the number of troops adequate for maintaining defence readiness, the ministry said. About 21,000 of the shortfall is in the non-commissioned officer ranks, it said.
South Korea is one of the world's fastest ageing societies and has the lowest fertility rate in the world at 0.75 in 2024, which signifies the average number of babies a woman is expected to have during her reproductive life.
Its population, which hit a peak of 51.8 million in 2020, is expected to shrink to 36.2 million by 2072, according to a government projection.
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