Self Employed Feel Like They are In Their Own “Squid Game” in South Korea
|One of the things I love about South Korea is the high number of self-employed mom & pop stores that are few and far between in America now. The COVID protocols are really crushing these businesses now:
In the hit Netflix series, “Squid Game,” the main character, Seong Gi-hun, joins the fight-to-the-death challenge, driven by the 400 million won he owes, after the failure of his restaurants, a business he started after losing his job at a car manufacturing company. Hit by the COVID-19 pandemic and changes in the economy, many small business owners say they are no different from Seong.
Korea Times
In an internet forum on the country’s top search engine and platform, Naver, where the self-employed share information, a man who runs a small sushi restaurant said he could not take his eyes off the show. “The show depicts in detail what it is like to be on the edge of a precipice,” he wrote. Another said he felt like he was living right in the middle of the game. The only difference is that “there will be no prize money even if I win,” he commented.
According to the National Self-Employed Emergency Response Committee, at least 22 small business owners have taken their own lives since the coronavirus pandemic began. One of them retrieved the deposit for her one-room studio apartment so as to pay her part-time workers before committing suicide. For many, even if the business is continuously incurring losses, immediately shutting down is not an option because they cannot terminate their rental contract without losing additional deposit money.
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