Journalist
Seo Hye Seung and Kim Yeon-jae
ellenshs@ajunews.com
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A quarter of the unemployed in South Korea are under 30 as jobless tops 1 million SEOUL, April 19 (AJP)-One in four unemployed South Koreans are young people under 30, as the country’s total jobless climbed back above 1 million for the first time in five years, pointing to a structural cliff at the entry level in the labor market. According to data released Sunday by Statistics Korea via KOSIS, the number of unemployed averaged 1.029 million in the January–March quarter, up 49,000 from a year earlier. It marked the first time since 2021 that first-quarter unemployment has exceeded 1 million, extending a three-year upward trend. The headline figure masks a sharper deterioration among younger workers. A total of 272,000 people aged 15 to 29 were unemployed in the first quarter, accounting for 26.4 percent of the total. Youth unemployment rose by 10,000 from a year earlier, marking a second consecutive annual increase. The youth unemployment rate climbed to 7.4 percent, up 0.6 percentage point on-year and the highest level for a first quarter since 2021, when the pandemic pushed it to 9.9 percent. Behind the rise lies a structural shift in hiring. Companies are increasingly favoring experienced workers, while large-scale open recruitment has given way to rolling, position-based hiring — a transition that has prolonged job searches for new entrants and recent graduates. Employment data underscore the strain. The number of employed young people fell by 156,000 on-year to 3.423 million in the first quarter, extending a decline to a 14th consecutive quarter. It marks the smallest youth employment level since comparable records began in 1980. While demographics are part of the story, they do not fully explain the drop. The youth population declined by 2.0 percent over the same period, but employment fell by 4.4 percent — more than twice as fast. That gap is reflected in the employment rate. The youth employment rate dropped to 43.5 percent, down 1.0 percentage point from a year earlier and the lowest for a first quarter in five years. In contrast, employment among those in their 30s continues to strengthen, suggesting delayed — rather than foregone — labor market entry. The employment rate for people in their 30s rose to 80.7 percent, the highest on record for a first quarter. A rise in applicants preparing for civil service exams also contributed, as individuals actively seeking work are classified as unemployed rather than economically inactive. The data point to a labor market increasingly defined by transition frictions, where young people cycle longer between inactivity, job search and employment before securing stable positions. The government is expected to roll out a package of youth employment measures later this month, including programs to strengthen job readiness, expand work experience opportunities and support re-entry into the labor market. 2026-04-19 15:30:27 -
Han Kang leads Korea's book market for a decade SEOUL, April 19 (AJP) -South Korean author Han Kang, the country’s first Nobel laureate in literature, is not just a literary heavyweight but the defining commercial force in South Korea’s book market over the past decade with her bestsellers "The Vegetarian" and "Human Acts", data showed. According to data released Sunday by Kyobo Book Centre ahead of World Book and Copyright Day on April 23, the two novels ranked first and second, respectively, in cumulative sales between April 17, 2016, and April 16, 2026, based on combined online and offline figures. Originally published in 2007, "The Vegetarian" gained global recognition after Han became the first Korean writer to win the Man Booker International Prize in 2016. The win triggered a surge in domestic readership, with the novel topping weekly bestseller charts for 12 consecutive weeks and becoming the best-selling book of that year. Nearly a decade later, Han’s readership saw a renewed surge following her receipt of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2024 — the first for a Korean author. This second wave was led by "Human Acts", her 2014 novel centered on the Gwangju Uprising, which ranked as the country’s annual bestseller in both 2024 and 2025. A Kyobo official noted that while "The Vegetarian" leads in cumulative sales due to its earlier post-Booker boost, "Human Acts" has outpaced it in more recent years. Han’s presence extended further down the list. Her 2021 novel "We Do Not Part", which deals with the Jeju 4·3 Incident, ranked eighth over the decade, supported by major international recognition including France’s Prix Médicis étranger in 2023 and the U.S. National Book Critics Circle Award this year. Of the top 10 bestsellers, six were Korean novels, underscoring sustained domestic demand for locally grounded fiction. Other titles in the ranking include Kim Ho-yeon’s "The Uncanny Convenience Store", Lee Mi-ye’s "DallerGut Dream Department Store", and Yang Gui-ja’s "Contradiction", which placed fifth through seventh. Nonfiction titles also featured prominently. The self-help book "Say No’s Teachings" ranked third, followed by Lee Ki-joo’s essay collection "The Temperature of Language" in fourth. Kim Soo-hyun’s "I Decided to Live as Me" came in ninth, while "Winnie-the-Pooh: Happy Things Happen Every Day" rounded out the top 10. Meanwhile, overall reading habits in South Korea continue to decline. According to the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism’s national reading survey, the proportion of adults who read at least one general book per year — excluding textbooks, exam materials, magazines and comics — fell from 67.4 percent in 2015 to 38.5 percent last year. 2026-04-19 15:14:54 -
South Korea's India–Vietnam state visit targets security, energy recalibration SEOUL, April 19 (AJP)-South Korean President Lee Jae Myung departed Sunday for a five-night, six-day state visit to India and Vietnam, a trip that goes beyond ceremonial diplomacy to probe whether Seoul can turn its “Global South” pivot into a workable economic and strategic hedge in an increasingly fractured world. The back-to-back visits — Lee’s first to India and the first state-level engagement with Vietnam’s new leadership — come at a moment when global supply chains are being reshaped by conflict in the Middle East and intensifying great-power rivalry. Lee’s itinerary follows the familiar arc of state visits: summit talks, business forums, and agreements spanning artificial intelligence, defense, shipbuilding and energy. In New Delhi, he is set to meet Prime Minister Narendra Modi , with both sides expected to accelerate an upgrade of the Korea–India CEPA and set a target of $50 billion in bilateral trade by 2030. In Hanoi, meetings with Communist Party chief To Lam and other senior officials will aim to deepen an already dense manufacturing and investment relationship, with a longer-term goal of pushing trade to $150 billion. Yet the meaning of the trip lies less in the schedule than in its sequencing. This is the first state visit to India in eight years and one of the fastest such trips by a new Korean administration — a signal that Seoul is moving early to reposition itself. The prolonged conflict around the Strait of Hormuz has exposed South Korea’s structural vulnerability: an export-driven economy dependent on imported energy and maritime logistics. Energy security and supply-chain coordination are explicitly on the agenda, with Seoul seeking closer alignment with both India and Vietnam on logistics resilience and critical minerals. India is central to that recalibration. Both countries arrive at the summit with a shared exposure to Middle East energy. South Korea sources roughly 70 to 75 percent of its crude from the Gulf, with almost all shipments transiting the Strait of Hormuz, leaving it acutely sensitive to any disruption in the narrow waterway and forced to explore more diverse sourcing. India, while also heavily reliant, imports a lower 55 to 65 percent from the region and has diversified part of its supply to Russia, the United States and West Africa. An area where the two are expected to seek active partnership is next-generation energy — pairing India’s vast renewable resource base with South Korea’s industrial and nuclear engineering strengths. New Delhi’s scale in solar and wind offers low-cost power for future demand, while Seoul brings grid technology, storage solutions and emerging small modular reactor (SMR) capabilities to stabilize intermittency and provide reliable baseload. The combination points to a complementary model: India as a production hub for clean energy and hydrogen, and Korea as a technology and systems integrator, with cooperation likely to center on hybrid energy systems, hydrogen supply chains and industrial decarbonization. With a population of 1.4 billion, rapid growth near 7 percent, and ambitions to become a manufacturing alternative to China, New Delhi offers both scale and strategic industrial base for Korean Inc. Vietnam, on the other hand, is not a future bet but a present anchor. It remains South Korea’s most deeply embedded production base in Southeast Asia, and the emphasis on early engagement with Hanoi’s new leadership reflects a priority on continuity. What is evolving is the scope of the relationship — from labor-intensive manufacturing toward infrastructure, energy and strategic resources — signaling a shift from factory floor to broader economic partnership. The dual visit points to a wider recalibration in Seoul’s external strategy. The language of the “Global South” is less about alignment than diversification — an attempt to spread risk across geographies at a time when concentration has become a liability. 2026-04-19 13:08:46 -
Korea's debt ratio to surpass advanced non-reserve peers next year, IMF warns SEOUL, April 19 (AJP)-South Korea’s government debt burden is set to cross a key threshold next year, overtaking the average of advanced economies without reserve currencies, as fiscal expansion continues to outpace economic growth, according to the latest assessment by the International Monetary Fund. The IMF projected in its April Fiscal Monitor that Korea’s general government debt-to-GDP ratio will rise from 54.4 percent this year to 56.6 percent in 2027, exceeding the 55.0 percent average for a group of 11 advanced non-reserve-currency economies that includes the Czech Republic, Denmark and Sweden. The crossover marks a symbolic shift for a country long viewed as fiscally conservative among advanced economies, highlighting how quickly its debt trajectory has steepened since the pandemic. The broader trend reflects a structural imbalance: debt is rising significantly faster than the economy. Between 2020 and 2025, Korea’s nominal GDP expanded at an annual average of 5.3 percent, while central and local government debt (D1) grew at 9.0 percent — roughly 1.7 times faster. That divergence is now feeding directly into the debt ratio, a key gauge of fiscal sustainability. The IMF expects Korea’s debt ratio to rise by 8.7 percentage points over the next five years, reaching 63.1 percent by 2031. That marks the steepest increase among the 11 comparator economies and the second-fastest pace after Hong Kong. In contrast, several peers — including Norway, Iceland and New Zealand — are projected to reduce their debt burdens over the same period. The IMF flagged Korea, alongside Belgium, as one of the countries facing “significant increases” in debt levels, underscoring mounting concerns over medium-term fiscal dynamics. At around the mid-50 percent range, Korea’s debt ratio still remains well below that of Group of Seven economies, where averages typically run between 120 percent and 130 percent of GDP. But unlike the United States or Japan, Korea does not issue a global reserve currency — a distinction that limits its flexibility during external shocks. Non-reserve currency economies tend to face sharper capital outflows and exchange rate volatility in times of stress, requiring stricter fiscal discipline. This structural constraint makes the pace of debt accumulation more consequential than the level itself. The IMF’s latest report also points to a worsening global fiscal backdrop. It warned that government balance sheets are facing structural deterioration amid higher borrowing costs and geopolitical shocks, including spillovers from the Middle East conflict. Globally, public debt is projected to exceed 100 percent of GDP by 2029, driven by persistent spending pressures and rising interest burdens. Key risks include war-related fiscal outlays, protectionism, shifts in sovereign bond markets and demographic aging — all factors that could further strain public finances. Against this backdrop, the IMF urged governments to adopt clearer medium-term fiscal frameworks while reallocating spending toward growth-enhancing investments. It also recommended targeted and temporary support measures to cushion households from energy price shocks, rather than broad-based subsidies. Seoul has signaled alignment with such guidance, emphasizing selective support for vulnerable groups and a restructuring of rigid expenditures to free up resources for strategic sectors such as artificial intelligence and future industries. 2026-04-19 12:37:03 -
N. Korea fires ballistic missile toward East Sea, suspected as sub-linked launch *Updated with additional information SEOUL, April 19 (AJP) -North Korea fired multiple short-range ballistic missiles from its submarine hub of Sinpo early Sunday in its latest string of weapons tests over the last two months amid ongoing war in the Gulf, raising the possibility of a submarine-linked launch as Pyongyang advances its sea-based nuclear ambitions. The Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said the launches were detected at around 6:10 a.m. from the Sinpo area, with the missiles flying about 140 kilometers. South Korean and U.S. intelligence authorities are conducting a detailed analysis of the missiles’ specifications and trajectory, with officials not ruling out a submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) test, while noting the unusually short range. South Korea’s presidential office convened an emergency National Security Council (NSC) meeting shortly after the launch, led by National Security Adviser Kim Hyun-jong, to assess the situation and review response measures. Participants reaffirmed a firm joint defense posture with the United States and agreed to closely monitor further North Korean activity. “Our military is closely monitoring North Korea’s various movements under a robust South Korea-U.S. combined defense posture and maintains the capabilities and posture to respond to any provocation in an overwhelming manner,” the JCS said, adding that Seoul, Washington and Tokyo are sharing related intelligence. The firing comes 11 days after Pyongyang last launched ballistic missiles on April 8, when it conducted two tests in a single day. A day earlier, on April 7, the North fired another projectile that appeared to fail shortly after launch. Sunday’s launch is the seventh ballistic missile test by North Korea this year, following earlier firings on Jan. 4, Jan. 27 and March 14, according to military data. It follows a series of recent weapons developments, including claimed trials of cluster-munition warheads, electromagnetic systems and upgraded missile engines, pointing to a broad-based effort to enhance tactical and strategic capabilities. The provocations also fall in the background of heightened regional tensions and ahead of a planned visit by Donald Trump to China next month, where North Korea is expected to be a key topic in talks with Xi Jinping along with the Middle East crisis. North Korea’s submarine-based nuclear ambitions have drawn renewed scrutiny since December 2025, when leader Kim Jong Un inspected what state media described as the country’s first nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarine (SSBN). Estimated at over 8,000 tons, the platform would mark a major leap from the North’s aging, conventionally powered fleet and is believed capable of carrying multiple SLBMs, potentially from the Pukguksong-5 series. Analysts say such a system — if operational — would significantly strengthen Pyongyang’s second-strike capability by enabling more survivable, sea-based nuclear deployments. Sinpo, the site of Sunday’s launch, has long served as the hub of North Korea’s SLBM program, underscoring the strategic significance of the latest activity. 2026-04-19 07:41:24 -
Seoul flags supply shift as Hormuz tensions flare again after brief reopening SEOUL, April 19 (AJP) -South Korea will push ahead with diversifying its energy supply chain as renewed instability in the Strait of Hormuz underscores persistent risks to global oil flows, even after a brief reopening of the key shipping route. The Gulf chokepoint slipped back into tension over the weekend, with Iran warning it would again restrict transit unless the United States lifts its blockade on Iranian ports, while Washington rejected the demand and signaled continued enforcement at sea. The conflicting positions quickly translated into operational risk. Multiple vessels reported coming under fire or being forced to turn back while attempting to pass through the strait, according to maritime authorities, highlighting the fragility of any reopening. The Strait of Hormuz carries roughly 20 percent of global oil supply and is a critical artery for South Korea, which depends on the route for a majority of its crude and naphtha imports. The latest disruption comes despite signs of diplomatic progress. Iran is reviewing new U.S. proposals for a potential deal, with talks expected to resume through third-party mediation, while a separate ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah has reduced fighting in Lebanon. However, Iranian officials have made clear that maritime access remains conditional, linking freedom of navigation to the removal of U.S. sanctions. Donald Trump has rejected that position, saying Iran “cannot blackmail” the United States. Analysts say the result is a shift from outright closure risk to intermittent disruption, where limited attacks or threats raise shipping costs and insurance premiums without fully halting flows. For South Korea, the episode has reinforced the need to reduce reliance on Middle Eastern supply routes. In an interview with Yonhap News Agency, Trade, Industry and Energy Minister Kim Jung-kwan made clear that South Korea will press ahead with a structural overhaul of its energy supply chain, even if hostilities in the Gulf subside. “Even if the war ends, we will not stop diversifying crude imports away from the Middle East and expanding transport routes,” he said, underscoring that supply chain resilience — not cost efficiency — has become the government’s defining economic doctrine. The policy pivot reflects a hard lesson. Despite repeated Middle East crises, South Korea remained heavily reliant on the region, with 61 percent of crude oil and 54 percent of naphtha imports routed through Hormuz as of last year. The government has also stepped up monitoring of key feedstocks such as naphtha, where supply concerns have been amplified by precautionary stockpiling across the supply chain. Authorities expect market conditions to stabilize if disruptions remain limited through April, but warned that volatility could persist as long as tensions in the Gulf remain unresolved. The latest developments suggest that even when the Strait of Hormuz is technically open, access may no longer be predictable — a shift that is likely to keep energy markets and import-dependent economies on edge. 2026-04-19 07:32:11 -
Korean tanker safely clears Red Sea in first Hormuz workaround SEOUL, April 17 (AJP) -A South Korea-linked crude carrier has safely exited the Red Sea after loading oil in Saudi Arabia despite Iranian military's threat of attacks on the corridor along the Saudi coast in protest to U.S. naval blockade of Tehran ports. The Korean sea flag carrier makes the first confirmed shipment to reach Korean-bound routes via a Hormuz bypass since the Gulf conflict disrupted one of the world’s most critical energy corridors, according to the government. The Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries on Friday said the vessel departed from Yanbu on Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea coast and navigated the high-risk waterway without incident amid ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran and separately between Israel and Lebanon. Iran has threatened to block the Red Sea trade route in retaliation to the U.S. naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. According to Iranian state media, the commander of Iran’s joint military command said Iran would “act with strength to defend its national sovereignty and its interests”, warning it would completely block exports and imports across the Persian Gulf region, the Sea of Oman and the Red Sea. The Red Sea — increasingly volatile since the 2023 Israel–Hamas war — has seen at least 79 reported vessel attacks linked to Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi forces, making it a route long discouraged for commercial shipping. Yet with Hormuz partially shut and roughly a fifth of global oil flows disrupted, Seoul has been forced to test options once deemed too dangerous. The ministry said it maintained 24-hour real-time monitoring of the vessel, providing navigation intelligence and running constant communication channels with the ship and operator throughout the transit. The operation follows high-level policy coordination. At an emergency economic review meeting on April 6, the government formally discussed using the Red Sea corridor as a contingency route, pairing supply diversification with enhanced maritime safety oversight. Some 26 South Korea-linked vessels — including crude tankers, LNG carriers and bulk ships — remain stranded or delayed around the Persian Gulf, reflecting the bottleneck created by the prolonged standoff. For an economy that routes around 70 percent of its crude imports through Hormuz, the stakes remain acute. Saudi Arabia accounted for 33.6 percent of Korea’s crude imports in 2025, followed by the United States (17 percent), the United Arab Emirates (11.4 percent), Iraq (10.4 percent) and Kuwait (8.5 percent), underscoring the country’s structural dependence on Middle Eastern supply lines. “The government will continue to prioritize the safety of our vessels and crews while working with relevant agencies and industry to ensure stable crude transport from the Middle East,” Oceans Minister Hwang Jong-woo said. Tensions have showed sign of easing with U.S. President Donald Trump saying the war was "very close to over" with the second round of talks being readied to take place over the weekend in Pakistan. Separately, Washington is arranging the first high-level direct peace talks between Israel and Lebanon for the first time in decades. 2026-04-17 13:42:19 -
IMF keeps Korea growth view at 1.9% on 'energy buffers' despite Gulf shock SEOUL, April 17 (AJP) -The International Monetary Fund on Thursday maintained its growth outlook for South Korea at 1.9 percent for this year, holding steady from its January projection as it pointed to “sufficient buffers” to withstand energy shocks stemming from the Gulf conflict. The assessment came as the war-driven surge in oil and gas prices adds a fresh layer of uncertainty to the global economy, with Asia seen as particularly exposed due to its heavy reliance on imported energy. “Asia is significantly exposed to the energy shock,” Krishna Srinivasan, director of the IMF’s Asia and Pacific Department, said during a regional outlook briefing in Washington. “The scale and persistence of the shock remain uncertain.” The IMF expects regional growth to slow from 5.0 percent last year to 4.4 percent in 2026, while inflation is projected to rise from 1.4 percent to 2.6 percent over the same period, reflecting the pass-through of higher energy costs. The vulnerability stems from structural factors. Oil and gas consumption accounts for around 4 percent of Asia’s GDP — nearly double that of Europe — while limited domestic production leaves many economies dependent on imports. Net energy imports amount to roughly 2.5 percent of GDP across the region, rising to as high as 8 percent in some economies. Beyond direct fuel costs, the IMF warned of broader supply chain risks. Disruptions to petrochemical inputs such as helium and sulfur could amplify production bottlenecks if the conflict drags on. Despite these pressures, the Fund said Asia entered 2026 with stronger-than-expected momentum, supported by resilient exports — particularly in technology goods — and recovering consumption. That underlying strength is expected to partially offset the shock, keeping growth forecasts broadly stable under the IMF’s baseline scenario, which assumes the energy disruption remains limited in duration. For South Korea, the IMF struck a cautiously balanced tone. “Korea starts from a strong macroeconomic position,” said Thomas Helbling, deputy director of the Asia and Pacific Department. He cited the country’s solid growth momentum, supported by the tech cycle, and its proactive policy response to mitigate the impact of the shock. The IMF also highlighted Korea’s relatively strong energy buffers as a key advantage compared to other energy-importing economies in the region. Still, vulnerabilities remain. “Korea, like the rest of Asia, is an energy-importing economy,” Helbling said, noting that the outlook could deteriorate significantly under a more prolonged or severe energy shock scenario. Under the IMF’s adverse scenario, oil prices could rise as much as 60 percent above earlier forecasts this year and remain elevated into 2027, leading to broader output losses and more persistent inflation across the region. In such a case, the impact would extend beyond price increases. “This is a shock which has both a price impact and a quantity impact,” Srinivasan said, warning that prolonged disruptions could lead to shortages in energy-related inputs and amplify supply chain stress. “If you have both price shocks and shortages, the growth impact becomes much more acute,” he added. Against this backdrop, the IMF urged policymakers to avoid overreacting to short-term inflation spikes while remaining flexible. Most Asian central banks still have room to “look through” the initial surge in energy prices, as inflation expectations remain broadly anchored, the Fund said. However, it cautioned that monetary policy must remain agile if the shock proves more persistent. On the fiscal side, the IMF reiterated its long-standing stance against broad-based subsidies and price controls, calling instead for targeted and temporary support measures. “Generalized subsidies are costly, distortionary and very hard to unwind,” Srinivasan said, emphasizing the need to preserve fiscal buffers after years of repeated shocks. The Fund also framed the current crisis as a catalyst for longer-term structural adjustments. It called for greater investment in alternative energy, improved energy efficiency and stronger power infrastructure to reduce dependence on imported fuels. At the same time, it urged deeper regional trade integration to cushion external shocks and enhance resilience. “The near-term task is to absorb the shock while preserving policy credibility,” Srinivasan said. “The medium-term task is to build a more resilient, balanced and inclusive growth model.” 2026-04-17 08:33:52 -
Korean-American former Rep. Michelle Steel tapped as US ambassador to South Korea SEOUL, April 14 (AJP) -Korean-American former California congresswoman Michelle Steel (Park Eunjoo in Korean) has been nominated as Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to South Korea, the White House said Monday as President Donald Trump finally moves to fill the post that has remained vacant throughout much of his second term. The nomination, which requires Senate confirmation, was submitted to Congress as Washington seeks to restore a formal diplomatic channel in Seoul after more than a year without a Senate-approved envoy. The ambassadorship has been vacant since the departure of Philip Goldberg, who was appointed by former President Joe Biden. Senior State Department official Kevin Kim has been serving as chargé d’affaires since October, following an earlier interim role by Joseph Yun. Steel, a Korean American Republican, served two terms in the U.S. House of Representatives, representing California districts covering Orange County from 2021 to 2025. She narrowly lost her reelection bid in 2024 to Democrat Derek Tran. Born in Seoul in 1955, Steel emigrated to the United States in her early twenties after spending part of her youth in Japan. Her political career began in California, where she served on the State Board of Equalization and later as an Orange County supervisor before entering Congress. She was also part of the House Republican leadership’s whip team under Steve Scalise. Her nomination had been widely anticipated since the early days of Trump’s second term, with Republican leaders including Mike Johnson and Kevin McCarthy reportedly backing her as a Korea-savvy figure within the party. If confirmed, Steel would become the second Korean American to serve as U.S. ambassador to South Korea after Sung Kim, and one of the few political appointees with both linguistic and cultural fluency in Korea. Her appointment is expected to restore high-level diplomatic bandwidth between Washington and Seoul, where the absence of a permanent envoy had raised concerns about Korea’s standing in U.S. foreign policy priorities. Observers say Steel’s direct political ties to Trump, combined with her Korean heritage and language skills, could position her as a more effective conduit between the two governments compared with career diplomats. The nomination also opens the possibility of a historic alignment, with both Seoul and Washington potentially represented by female ambassadors in each other’s capitals for the first time. 2026-04-14 07:41:12 -
BTS draws global fans to rain-soaked Goyang as world tour kicks off GOYANG, South Korea, April 09 (AJP) — Neither unseasonable spring rain nor distance kept fans from gathering for BTS’ first full-member stadium concert in seven years, as the group kicked off its three-night home run in Goyang, just west of Seoul, on Thursday night. Thousands filled the 41,311-seat Goyang Stadium, where a 360-degree in-the-round stage allowed all seven members to face every section of the crowd. Police estimated that roughly half of those arriving from early afternoon were foreign nationals, underscoring the group’s global pull. Tickets for all three nights sold out immediately, bringing total attendance in Goyang to about 120,000. The steady rain did little to dampen the mood. Purple umbrellas — the band’s signature color — blanketed the venue in an orderly scene that drew notice from authorities on standby. Fans freely exchanged phones with strangers to take photos, bound by little more than shared trust as members of ARMY, BTS’s global fan base. Tripti, 25, from India who came from India alone just for the show, was impressed how at home she felt. "I felt as if I wasn't alone at all. Everyone offered to take picture of me. I'm grateful and proud to be an ARMY." Jessi (24), like her Indian peer, also has come to Korea just for the show, and is hardly affected by the bad weather. Cho Eun-joo (44), who introduced herself as “Ms. Hanbok,” handed out purple daenggi hair ribbons inspired by traditional Korean dress, while others reciprocated with gifts they had brought from home — a reflection of the communal, festival-like atmosphere. The concerts mark the live debut of BTS’s fifth studio album, ARIRANG, their first group release since completing mandatory military service in mid-2025. The album, released March 20, topped the Billboard 200 for two consecutive weeks — a first for a K-pop act — while lead single “SWIM” debuted at No. 1 on the Hot 100. The “BTS World Tour ‘ARIRANG’” will span 85 shows across 34 cities through 2027, setting a new benchmark for a K-pop tour. Industry estimates suggest total revenue could reach 2.7 trillion won ($1.81 billion), excluding additional spending by fans. The expanded schedule includes Latin American stops such as Lima, Santiago and Buenos Aires, marking the group’s first full-member performances in several of those markets and new milestones at major venues across the region. Demand has already translated into strong ticket sales, with multiple dates across Asia, North America and Europe sold out. Promoter Live Nation said about 2.4 million tickets have been sold for 41 shows in North America and Europe alone. Beyond touring, BTS has sustained momentum through a staggered content rollout. A Netflix documentary, BTS: THE RETURN, traces the making of ARIRANG, while a series of music and performance videos has continued to drive global engagement across platforms. The group has also sustained engagement through a staggered release strategy, spacing out new content instead of concentrating attention around a single promotional window. The music video for “SWIM,” released on March 20, has drawn more than 92.1 million views and reached No. 3 on YouTube’s trending chart. An official performance video followed on March 25, topping 22.9 million views and ranking No. 5 on the same chart. On April 2, the “BTS 2.0” video surpassed 34.1 million views and climbed to No. 2 on YouTube’s music trending chart. Most recently, the music video for “Hooligan,” released on April 8, drew more than 4.9 million views within hours. Joonha Yoo contributed to the story. 2026-04-09 21:25:22
