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Why Incheon is the Best City for Young Families in South Korea: A 2024 Analysis

Daniel Kim Views  

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Rapid gains led by economic vitality and health-and-safety; highest population growth rate nationwide; youth and newlywed policies proving effective; childcare and education policies shaping a 'city suited to raising children'

    Exterior view of Incheon City Hall. Provided by Incheon City
  Exterior view of Incheon City Hall. Provided by Incheon City

An assessment of metropolitan livability found Incheon ranked first nationwide for quality-of-life improvement, marking it as one of the fastest-changing cities in South Korea.

The evaluation analyzed changes from 2020 to 2024 across four domains: economic vitality, health and safety, population and society, and childcare and education.

On the 19th, the city said that improvements in health and safety and in population and society were the main drivers of the overall gains.

The population and society category rose by 39 points, while health and safety increased by 13 points. Economic vitality and childcare/education fell by 6 and 7 points respectively, but the net effect still produced overall quality-of-life gains.

Per-capita personal income rose by roughly 20% over four years, and Incheon recorded the highest average economic growth rate nationwide over the past three years.

Qualitative growth in the regional economy was driven by logistics centered on the airport and port, investment attracted to the Free Economic Zone, and strategies to cultivate future industries such as biotechnology and semiconductors.

In health and safety, policies to improve access to care reduced unmet medical needs, while public medical support expanded in underserved areas, including island communities.

Proactive mental health initiatives also corresponded with a marked drop in citizens’ reported stress levels.

On population measures, Incheon was one of the few metropolitan cities to register growth: it ranked first nationwide in both total population growth rate and net migration increase.

Officials attribute this trend to life-stage–targeted policies—such as housing support for young people and newlyweds and childbirth and parenting assistance—that have translated into real residential appeal.

In childcare and education, policies aimed at closing care gaps and reducing parenting burdens are yielding results.

By improving teacher-to-child ratios, expanding emergency and nighttime childcare, and leading initiatives to increase child allowances, the city is reinforcing its foundation as a place well suited for raising children.

Incheon Mayor Yoo Jeong-bok said, \”These outcomes mean more than numerical gains; they reflect meaningful changes that residents experience in their daily lives. Incheon is now one of the most rapidly improving cities in South Korea.\”

\”From economic growth and expanded welfare to stronger safety measures and a more robust care system, citizens’ lives are at the center of every policy,\” he added. \”We will continue to strengthen tangible, experienceable policies so residents can feel the changes and take pride in them.\”

Incheon plans to keep residents’ quality of life its top priority and aims to advance as a sustainable future city where urban growth and citizens’ well-being progress together.

Incheon — Lee Chun-man, reporter lcm9504@viva100.com

Daniel Kim
content@tenbizt.com

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