South Koreans Embrace Youthful Transformation with New Age-Counting Law

TL;DR Summary
South Korea has officially adopted the "international age" system, counting a person's age from their date of birth, in an effort to reduce confusion caused by the three different age calculation methods used in the country. The previous system, known as "Korean age," considered a baby one year old at birth. The switch aims to streamline various aspects of life, including school enrollment, military service, legal drinking age, and pensions. While the majority of South Koreans support the change, there may be challenges in implementing the new system uniformly, as certain laws and cultural norms will still rely on the previous age calculation methods.
- Here's why a lot of South Koreans suddenly just found themselves a year or two younger CBS News
- South Koreans get younger as the country officially drops its traditional age-counting system South China Morning Post
- South Koreans become younger under new age-counting law BBC
- South Koreans glad to be younger as the traditional way of counting age scrapped | WION Shorts WION
- At least a year younger on paper: South Korea makes changes to age-counting law USA TODAY
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