The international system replaces one of the country's two traditional methods, where people are deemed to be a year old at birth - taking into account time spent in the womb.
The international system replaces one of the country's two traditional methods, where people are deemed to be a year old at birth - taking into account time spent in the womb.
"I was about to turn 30 next year [under the traditional Korean age system], but now I have some more time earned, and I love it," Choi Hyun-ji, a 27-year-old office worker in Seoul, told the Reuters News agency.
I actually don't get how this works, and I lived in South Korea for a year. I get that your age increases on New Year's Day, but how can you be any more than a year older than your "international age"?
I've seen no evidence of counting time in the womb. I have seen lots of non-Koreans spreading the belief around.
What happens is the moment you are born you are 1 in Old Korea Counting (OKC). 0 international.
On January 1 you are 2 in OKC and 0 international.
On your 1st birthday you are 2 in OKC and 1 international.
On the next January 1 you are 3 OKC and 1 international.
And so forth.
Source: 2 decades in Korea, Korean spouse who is happy to be younger, and a Korean child who is very disappointed to be younger. When our child was born we didn't say they were 9 months (OKC), they were 1(OKC).
It has been explained to me as "counting the years you have been alive during".
Sorry if it's a silly question, but if a child is born on december 31 just a minute before the new year, could he be 2 before the mother gets to hold him then?
Let's say the office worker who is 27 internationally today was born in December 1995. He was 1 at his birth, turned 2 in January 1996 (Korean age). In January 2023 he turned 29 and will turn 30 in January 2024, but internationally he'll turn 28 in December 2023.