Showing posts with label Corona in Korea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Corona in Korea. Show all posts

Monday, July 20, 2020

How Endemic Coronavirus Change Daily Lives of Koreans?

It has been 6 months since the first coronavirus was found in Korea in January 2020. Koreans have been doing a great job to manage the virus spread. However, coronavirus seem to remain here with us longer than we expected. Now, people are adapting to life with this virus.

 

Wearing personal protection gear

In Korea, wearing a face mask is nothing to do with your political opinion. It is just a matter of public health. Koreans understand that a face mask is the most effective and simplest way to protect yourself and others from the vicious virus. You can find everyone wearing mask in public space. Particularly, you should wear face mask in closed spaces such as elevators and public transportation.

 

At the same time, more and more people are using plastic gloves to protect their hands from the virus. on public transport and in elevators. They do not want to risk exposure to the virus by touching buttons with their bare fingers. Many people push the buttons and the public is concerned that they might be contaminated with the virus. Washing hands has become the new protocol in the daily lives of Koreans. Hand sanitizers are available in all public places such as the bus, subway stations and elevators.

 

Education

Koreans have great passion for children’s education. Koreans have never been satisfied with the public education system and spend a lot of money for private education for their children. The market size of the private education sector in Korea is around USD 20 Billion or 1.3% of GDP.

The private education industry is trying to find ways to survive in the non-contact era caused by the virus. It is easy to find educational institutions providing tutoring services through video conference systems. Supaja (www.supaja.com) is a one-on-one math tutoring service provider for K-12 students. Online tutoring services are not very popular in Korea yet. However, these service providers are gaining positive feedback from users. Students can get assistance from tutors without worrying about coronavirus infection.


 Violinist Yeseul is giving a lesson to a student in the US

Source: Yeseul Voilin (https://blog.naver.com/yeseul10/222001519044)

 

Online tutoring has also been spreading quickly in the adult private education market after the coronavirus pandemic outbreak. Many musical instrument lessons are delivered online. It is different from online classes on Youtube. Teachers give real-time one-on-one lessons for students who want to practice musical instruments such as violin and piano. The students need a couple of webcams, a microphone and a computer or smartphone. The feedback from the students on this type of tutoring is relatively positive. Online lessons are not as effective as face to face ones, but they work a lot better than they expected. Better devices and systems for supporting this market are likely to be available soon.

 

Many Koreans are shifting from using fitness centers to home training. They want to keep exercising but fitness centers are not safe place in the coronavirus era. They are using home trainers’ clips on Youtube and some customers receive real time lessons from weight trainers. The real-time trainer provides weight training skills and discipline to exercise consistently. Home training and online trainers are good alternatives to visiting the gym.

 

Business

Video conferences have become the new norm among businesspeople. Many government officials ask not to visit them physically and do online meetings instead. Many conglomerates are implementing online meetings instead of face to face ones. Many other small and medium size businesses tend to follow the business practices of larger companies and government offices. As the coronavirus has remained with us longer than we expected, emergency measures are becoming the new normal.

 

Korea has a small and open economy. Many global companies have offices and production facilities in Korea. As the coronavirus spread, it became difficult for head office managers to visit Korea physically. Some of them are seeking more effective ways to manage local organization in Korea. One good solution is hiring a local, third-party manager. The third-party manager should have good communication capability with local people and head office as well. The manager should have managerial capability to deal with local staff.  

 

Shopping

According to Nielson Korea, Korean consumers are buying more online than before the coronavirus spread. 38% of Korean consumers pick online sites as their main shopping channel while only 29% of them chose online channels before coronavirus.

 



 


Source: Nielsen Korea

 

92% of Korean consumers are utilizing online and offline shopping channels. 7% of consumers use only online channels while only 1% of consumers use only offline channels. According to the survey, more than 70% of consumers expressed satisfaction with online shopping and 59% are satisfied with offline shopping.

 

Koreans have spent more money than before to buy hand sanitizers (305%), packaged Kimchi (24%), ready to eat porridge (16%) and retort food (14%). In the cleaning items category, all-purpose cleaner (18%) and kitchen towels (13%) are the products that have grown the most since the coronavirus emerged. The choice of items seems to demonstrate that people stay home longer and focus more on home sanitization.

 

Leisure

Domestic tours

According to a survey from a local tour company, Koreans plan 5 days or visiting domestic destinations this summer. Jeju island is the most popular tourist destination for summer holidays this year, followed by Gyeongju and Gangneung.

 

The most important factor when choosing accommodation is cleanness. Hotels and resorts are the most popular accommodation types for Koreans vacationers this summer.   

 

Movie theaters

In May 2020, only 1.5 million people went to a movie theater in Korea, a 91.6% decrease year on year. On other side, Netflix’s revenue in April 2020 increased 2.4 times comparison to April 2019. In the first quarter of 2020, overall payment for internet services  increased 22% yoy.






Tuesday, April 21, 2020

What can we do to minimize the risks of the corona virus infection?


IRC Managing Partner Interview:






  
IRC CONSULTING 
Suite 1705, Officia Building, 92, Saemunan-roJongno-gu, Seoul, Republic of Korea 03186 
서울시종로구새문안로92 광화문오피시아빌딩, 1705Tel: +82-2-737-3222,  http://www.ircconsultingkorea.com 

Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Easter – the promise of Life After




Cherry blossoms splash color across the cityscape as the fresh green hues of spring push aside the brown cocoon of winter. A sense of hope and new life has been palpable this past week culminating in Easter Sunday with its promise of a life after. 

Overall, it has been a good week for Korea with daily new cases of COVID-19 dropping to around 25.  Sadly, the week also marked the capital city's first two deaths from the virus and saw the total nationwide death rate pass through the 200 threshold. While each life is precious and even a single death a tragedy for loved ones, compared to other major metropolitan areas, Seoul in particular and Korea in general have fared very well.



Korea has managed this remarkable performance without any general lockdown that is being imposed in most 'advanced' western nations.  Korea, a 'globally connected' society, has made every effort to keep the skies open although all arriving passengers are obliged to 'self-quarantine' for 14 days. Schools remain closed and large gatherings remain banned (respected by all but a few unrepentant protestant churches). People go to work, factories are operating, restaurants remain open (albeit with somewhat reduced clientele), public transport is operating normally.  Traffic was very light on Easter Sunday but any respite from rush hour on Friday night was indiscernible. While the frenetic energy of Seoul is somewhat subdued, for most of the population, life goes on more or less as normal.

Korea is frequently cited as a model case for dealing with the pandemic and many world leaders have called President Moon looking for insights into how best to manage the crisis in their own jurisdictions.  Unfortunately, I doubt whether Korea's model offers a blueprint for others.  The most effective countermeasure is to be prepared.  In most countries, it is too late for that.  Korea never stood down from MERS so all of the systems were in place to identify people infected by the virus.  Potential spreaders were quickly isolated.  Tracking systems are world class providing citizens with real time information about places where infected people have been. Recent arrivals violating the 14-day quarantine are identified immediately and sanctioned.  Admonitions to wash your hands, wear a mask, cover your mouth when sneezing and exercise social distancing are ubiquitous.  However, Korea's most enviable and most difficult to copy secret weapon is the disciplined population. Virtual universal adherence to pandemic countermeasures have spared the government more draconian measures. While many countries have had to resort to suspending political freedoms to achieve effective countermeasures, Koreans go to the polls on the 15th of April to elect their representatives to the National Assembly.  There is much to be admired about Korea's response but copying it may be more difficult.

Personally, I am proud of Korea, the country that my family has called home for 135 years.  In my lifetime, this country had changed itself from a poor nation, unable to feed and care for itself to a global model – perhaps the only country to emerge from this crisis with minimal impact in all spheres, health, economy and politics. 

대한민국 만세!

Peter Underwood, Managing Partner 

For up to date information: Korean Ministry of Health and Welfare Infection Rate Tracker 

  
IRC CONSULTING 
Suite 1705, Officia Building, 92, Saemunan-roJongno-gu, Seoul, Republic of Korea 03186 
서울시종로구새문안로92 광화문오피시아빌딩, 1705Tel: +82-2-737-3222,  http://www.ircconsultingkorea.com 







Monday, March 23, 2020

Korea: Second Wave?




As the world reels from the impact of the rapidly spreading virus, too have tempered my optimism over the past week.  The early assessment that the virus was coming under control (based on daily declines in the number of new cases) proves to have been pre-mature. There were several days last week where daily new cases jumped back to the 150 plus mark.   

Furthermore, the virus seems to be stalking closer.  A greater percentage of the new cases are in the Seoul, metropolitan area and less concentrated in the Daegu hot spot.  The son of a colleague at SFS, our local international school, returned from a study break in the UK with COVID-19 among his gifts. Saruga, our local supermarket was closed for disinfecting on Sunday when it transpired that a patron who visited on Wednesday had tested positive. I am not sure whether I should be pleased that we took care of the weekly purchases on Saturday morning before it closed or be concerned that we shopped while the virus might have been lurking around.  

Public support in the fight against the virus seems to have taken a blow as well. Video clips of young people thronging to night clubs laid bare the image of civic solidarity.  Many churches continue to hold mass services tarnishing the reputation of Christianity here.  News reports about a young family of three that recklessly visited Italy last week all returning with the virus enraged citizens who are clamoring they be punished.  The prime minister gave a speech on Saturday urging all citizens to be vigilant pleading for the postponement of all non-urgent meetingsThe next week or two will unveil whether Korea's tremendous efforts are a model for the world to follow or were merely a flukeWe are not out of the woods yet but let's hope that Sunday's low number of new cases (64) is a return to the downward trend and that last week's high numbers were the anomaly.   

Peter Underwood, Managing Partner 

For up to date information: Korean Ministry of Health and Welfare Infection Rate Tracker 

  
IRC CONSULTING 
Suite 1705, Officia Building, 92, Saemunan-roJongno-gu, Seoul, Republic of Korea 03186 
서울시종로구새문안로92 광화문오피시아빌딩, 1705Tel: +82-2-737-3222,  http://www.ircconsultingkorea.com