S.Korea's elderly population to exceed 10 million in 2024

The working-age population will fall by a million as the country from 2025 will enter a super-aged society era

S.Korea's elderly population to exceed 10 million in 2024
Jin-gyu Kang 1
2023-02-28 10:10:18 josep@hankyung.com
Culture & Trends

The number of people in South Korea aged 65 or over next year is expected to break 10 million, with the country to enter an era in which 20% of the population is a senior citizen.

Statistics Korea on Monday released data forecasting the population of people aged 65 or older at 10,008,326 next year, up 5.4% from 9,499,933 this year. Last year, the elderly population broke nine million for the first time in history with 9,018,412 and is seen to hit the 10 million milestone two years later.

The population of those aged 14 or younger, however, will shrink from 6,143,634 in 2021 to 5,686,017 this year and 5,462,580 next year. The working-age population of ages 15-64 will fall by over a million from 37,029,895 in 2021 to 36,029,123 next year. The national population is seen to dip from 51,744,876 in 2021 to 51,447,504 in 2025, but only the elderly demographic will see growth.

The era of a super-aged society is also looming in the country. An aged society is classified as one in which the population of those aged 65 or above is 14% or over and a super-aged society as that with 20% or more.

Statistics Korea said the elderly will account for 20.6% of the national population in 2025, up from 18.4% this year, with the super-aged society to begin the year after the number of elderly people exceeds 10 million.

Write to Jin-gyu Kang at josep@hankyung.com

S.Korea forecast to have world's oldest population by 2070

S.Korea forecast to have world's oldest population by 2070

Two senior citizens sit in Tapgol Park, a hot gathering spot for elderly people in Seoul (File Photo, Courtesy of Yonhap) South Korea is expected to become the world’s most elderly country with about half of its population aged 65 or older by 2070, the government forecasts, adding to conc

S.Korea to report first-ever population drop in 2021

S.Korea to report first-ever population drop in 2021

South Korea's total population in 2021 is set to decline for the first time since the country began collecting census data, hit by a sharp fall in birth rates and immigration since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.  The population in Asia's fourth-largest economy, including foreign

(* comment hide *}