The traditional method of counting age is deeply ingrained in South Korean culture. Birth year, not birth date, for instance, is the basis for the Korean zodiac system. The use of terms like “oppa” or “hyung” (ways of addressing an older brother), and “unnie” and “noona,” (which mean older sister) is dependent on the age of the age of the people involved in the conversation, and that, too, is dependent on birth year.
But the bill received broad support from the South Korean public. More than 80 percent of the country’s citizens surveyed by the government in September said they supported the bill, offering many reasons: It would resolve the confusion and inconvenience caused by the various age calculation methods; break down the hierarchical culture sustained by the Korean age counting method; and “lower people’s perceived age.”
More than 85 percent of the respondents in the same survey said they would also switch to the standard method in everyday life if the bill were passed.
Whether people will actually abandon the traditional system remains to be seen. That, experts said, would take some time.
“The traditional way of calculating age is hard to abandon,” said Shin Jiyoung, a professor of Korean language and literature at Korea University. “It’s so closely entwined to the Korean language.”
“It’s important to acknowledge why we have kept using it despite how confusing it is,” she added.