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The number of Koreans getting married tumbled to a new all-time low in 2021 amid the COVID-19 pandemic and young people's changing attitude toward marriage, government data showed Thursday.
Just 193,000 couples tied the knot in Asia's fourth-largest economy last year, down 9.8 percent from the previous year, according to the data from Statistics Korea.
This is the lowest since 1970, when the statistical agency began compiling related data, and is the 10th straight year of falling numbers.
The year-on-year fall was lower than the previous year's 10.7 percent, which marked the first double-digit decline in 23 years.
Last year's drop came as more young Koreans are opting to distance themselves from life's three major milestones ― dating, marriage and having children ― because they cannot find decent jobs amid a prolonged economic slowdown. The COVID-19 outbreak is also widely believed to have led to many canceled or delayed marriages.
The latest data also showed that the average age of Korean men getting married reached 33.4 years last year, up 0.1 of a year from 2020.
The median marrying age of first-time brides stood at 31.1 years, up 0.3 of a year from the previous year.
The number of Koreans marrying foreign spouses stood at 13,000 in 2021, down 14.6 percent from a year earlier and accounting for 6.8 percent of total marriages.
Meanwhile, the number of divorces reached 102,000 last year, down 4.5 percent from the previous year and marking the second straight year showing a reduction.
Couples who were married for less than five years accounted for the largest portion of the total at 18.8 percent, followed by those married for 30 years and longer with 17.6 percent and couples married for five to nine years with 17.1 percent. (Yonhap)