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So far in our shows featuring the average person, we've focused on Europe and
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North America.
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Today we're heading to Asia to compare what could be called a flourishing nation with
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a country that is usually given the epithet of "secret state".
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The two countries sit side by side, and yet today they share little in common.
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One nation is viewed as a threat to western democratic capitalist values, and the other
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an ally and exponent of those values.
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Separated by a demilitarized zone, it's not often that the global public gets to see
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what happens north of the border.
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Even when we are given a glimpse inside the secretive nation, we are often told the reality
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was only a show, propaganda.
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Today we are going to take a look inside, in this episode of the Infographics Show,
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The average North Korean vs. the Average South Korean.
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Notification Squad.
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According to a fact sheet created by the Korean Economic Institute of America, South's Korea's
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51 million people are currently living in the 13th largest economy in the world based
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on purchasing power parity.
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That number is 1.93 trillion dollars.
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It's GDP is 1.4 trillion dollars, putting South Korea in 11th place in the world for GDP.
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North Korea's 25 million people will not be enjoying an economic boom anytime soon.
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It's GDP, according to the CIA Factbook, was 25 billion dollars in 2015.
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Some sources say this number is lower.
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The country's main industries are agriculture, mining, fishing and the services, while South
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Korea's major industries cover more modern sectors such as electronics, automotive, shipbuilding,
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and petrochemicals.
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What this means in terms of wealth per capita, well, you can probably figure that out.
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The average wage in South Korea in 2016 according to the Organization for Economic Co-operation
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and Development was just over 32,000 U.S. dollars a year.
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This was taken by calculating the total wage bill in the country by the number of full-time
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employees.
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As the North Korean government doesn't publish its salaries, it's hard to know exactly
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what people get paid.
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According to North Korean Economy Watch, a high paid official in the country could earn
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as much as 1,000 dollars a month.
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In an article published in NPR, it was said many talented North Koreans working in good
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factory jobs were earning around 62 dollars a month.
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It also said the workers were doing relatively ok, and some were earning 100 dollars per
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month.
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This is certainly good when compared to the bottom rung of the ladder, with some reports
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saying many North Koreans earned as little as 2 or 3 dollars a month.
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If that is the case, how do they survive on such meager wages?
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For starters, North Korea claims that it is the world's only tax free country, celebrating
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Tax Abolition Day on April 1st.
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Even if that's true, many studies tell us that a large number of North Koreans battle
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with poverty.
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A KUNI report stated that much of the population has to live on corn and kimchi, and doesn't
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even have fuel to cook with.
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The upside, if it can be seen that way, is that all North Korean property is owned by
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the government.
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North Koreans are given a place to live, but the condition of that place will depend on
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what work you do and what rank you hold.
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Your social status and which part of the country you live in will also factor.
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This could mean getting a fairly decent apartment, or living in a place heated by an open fire
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that does not have a flushing toilet or reliable electricity.
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Education is also free, and North Korea says it has a national literacy rate of 100% for
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children 15 or over.
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Healthcare is free, although according to various articles, it is lacking.
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This is because of underfunding, which is partly due to sanctions and a struggling economy.
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According to one article published in The Guardian, sick people were using crystal meth
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instead of medical drugs because the former was cheaper and provided a modicum of relief.
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South Koreans could be said to be breaking good in comparison, but at the same time more
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money does often mean more problems.
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While the southerners enjoy higher wages, they also have high household debt according
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to global averages.
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In a 2017 article in Business Insider, South Korea landed in 7th position on the debt list,
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with 90% household debt to GDP.
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While working in North Korea doesn't sound like a walk in the park, South Koreans are
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well known for overworking themselves.
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According to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, the South Koreans
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worked the second highest number of hours in the world in 2015, at 2,113 hours.
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This could include 12 hours of obligatory overtime on weekdays, and 16 hours on weekends.
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South Koreans get 16 days of public holidays, one less public holiday than in North Korea.
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We might also cite a recent Time magazine article that said North Koreans are forced
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to work 70 days straight to get a day off.
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Other sources have said they get 15 days off a year.
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With all that hard work, South Koreans might hope to have good healthcare if they fall
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ill from overdoing it.
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That they do, with their free for all compulsory National Health Insurance.
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South Korea also has very modern standards of medical care and highly qualified medical
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professionals.
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The system is frequently rated as being one of the best in the world.
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It can't, however, do anything for a successful suicide.
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According to the most recent World Health Organization report on global suicide, South
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Korea was the only developed country in the world to make it onto the top ten list.
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Other lists include Japan.
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Rates differ wherever you look, with some sources putting South Korea in third place
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in the world, behind… North Korea.
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Most reports don't mention North Korea because there are no verifiable statistics.
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The rates are rising, and it stands at around 41.7 per 100,000 men in South Korea.
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This is very high in view of all other developed nations.
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Many experts say the high expectations of society on sometimes overworked men is to
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blame.
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The rate is also high for women, we should add.
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This also applies to school in the South, where students study notoriously long hours
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as well as after school study.
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For this reason, its students are often in the top leagues globally for their academic
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performance.
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7 out of every 10 high school students in South Korea go to university, but this also
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means competitiveness and pressure make life hard for youngsters.
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One report says half of them think about ending it all during their school years.
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It also means more expensive private schools popping up, while private university semesters
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can cost anything from US$3,000 to US$6,000.
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North Korea's 23,000 colleges and universities are all free.
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Let's now turn to the body.
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These two countries should surely have similar looking people, right?
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Well, some reports say that due to ill-health, North Koreans are on average two inches, or
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even three inches shorter than South Koreans.
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Outspoken social critic Christopher Hitchens once wrote that it was more like a 5 or 6
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inch difference.
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Men in the South average around 5 feet 8 and a half and women about five feet 2.
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The South Koreans are also quite well-proportioned, and not suffering an obesity crisis like many
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developed nations.
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Men average around 154 pounds and women around 123 pounds.
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Unlike the paunchy leader Kim Jong Un, most North Koreans are on the lighter side than
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their southern counterparts.
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Some reports state that Kim Jong Un gained 88 pounds since becoming leader.
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As for having fun when not working too hard or prostrating yourself to your most excellent
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leader, a Guardian article that cited North Korean defectors said that the spirit of eumjugamu,
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meaning the love of 'drinking, music and dancing,' is alive and well in the North.
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This is where the two countries can say they still share a similar trait: they both love
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karaoke and getting wasted on white liquor.
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Although, said the article, North Koreans do it at home and southerners tend to go out.
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We'll leave it on that merry note.
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Can you think of other ways North Koreans differ from South Koreans?
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Let us know in the comments!
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Also, be sure to check out our other video called Americans vs Europeans!
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Thanks for watching, and, as always, don't forget to like, share, and subscribe.
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See you next time!