The choice of birth and promotion routines, South Korea's "incentive" policy has aroused heated discussions
[Hip Hop Warm-up]: The hen and the promotion opportunity are on the line, and the South Korean government has engaged in an operation to communicate with each other, which has attracted doubts floating all over the city. Is this policy show to save the population or start a strange model?
[Rough plot]: Recently, in order to rescue the declining fertility rate, the South Korean government has raised the banner associated with promotion. At first glance, it seems that everyone is "educating people and getting promoted", but this routine has aroused public resentment. After all, no one expected that the government would be able to come up with a "noble guard" trick on such an issue.
The government has threatened that from January 2024, if you are a civil servant and have two or more cuties, you will have more points on your way to promotion. Although the specific matter of adding a few points and how to add points has not yet been decided, seeing that those "two-child families" have crossed the bachelors on the cusp of promotion, this news still makes many people itch.
[express their opinions]: For the operation of this policy "hanging", not only the civil servants are in a mood, but also the ordinary people who eat melons have complained. Some people said indignantly: "When my colleague is on maternity leave, a single dog carries a lot of work, but when it comes to promotion, it will be unfair!" and some people shouted: "This regulation is so unreasonable, single, only, and infertile civil servants are discriminated against." ”
As for the South Korean government, when it hears this bunch of complaints, it is also a ghost who knows how to respond. They roughly said that if everyone didn't like it, they would grind and chirp again, or revise the plan again. However, it seems that the government has lost its grip and intends to release this "policy monster" in January 2024.
[Expressing Feelings]: The South Korean government seems to be cornered by the population problem. While they are urging fertility, they also engage in a series of incentives, but the fertility rate is still a mess. After all, having a baby doesn't go according to the plan, right?
[Derivative Plot]: In this policy storm, people from all walks of life are speculating whether this routine can really solve the population crisis? After the policy is implemented, what more bizarre reactions and stories will there be? Perhaps, this is just one aspect of South Korea's social change, and life is really incomprehensible.