Wall Street Journalのインスタグラム(wsj) - 11月27日 02時02分
A cultural preference for male children has cost Asia dearly. For decades, South Korea was Exhibit A in this depressing trend. By 1990, as medical advances made prenatal sex selection routine, the ratio of male-to-female babies soared in South Korea to the world’s highest, at 116.5 males for every 100 females. Then something unusual happened. South Korea did a U turn. In one generation, South Korea has gone from a society where sons are prized to one where daughters are just as eagerly received. 64-year-old Lim Ki-ouk (top right) says she once saw herself as a failure for only having daughters, but now she is envied. See how South Korea reversed course and the challenges other countries will face at the link in our bio. (?: @truth_leem for @Wall Street Journal) #southkorea #2050 #demographics
[BIHAKUEN]UVシールド(UVShield)
>> 飲む日焼け止め!「UVシールド」を購入する
1,376
27
2015/11/27