Special Report: Global Financial Crisis
BEIJING, Nov. 28 -- South Korean student Shin
Hye-young used to live it up.
The 24-year-old undergraduate at Beijing's University
of International Business and Economics (UIBE) had a single-bedroom apartment in
the well-heeled area of Wangjing all to herself. She would eat out at
restaurants five days a week, indulging in the choicest cuts of beef in Korean
barbecues with her friends.
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A man walks past a property office that
mainly serves South Koreans in Wangjing, northeastern Beijing, on November
19. The area is home to about 30,000 South Koreans. (Photo: China
Daily) Photo
Gallery>>> |
Since she arrived in the capital in 2005, cabs had
been Shin's main mode of transport. She would think nothing of spending 40 yuan
(about 6 U.S. dollars) on a single trip.
This lavish lifestyle was made possible by the
monthly allowance her parents in Cheongju, about two hours' drive to the south
of Seoul, would transfer to her Beijing bank account - more than 5,000 yuan, or
about twice the amount what a migrant worker would make a month on a
construction site in the city.
But the good times are over for Shin, and other South
Korean students like her.
The current global financial crisis that started in
the United States has struck the South Korean community in Beijing particularly
hard, with the value of the Korean won plummeting from about 1 yuan exchanging
for 130 won in 2005, to almost half at 1 yuan to 220 won now.
Shin feels she has become "poor overnight", a
nightmare shared by many of her compatriots in recent months.
As the president of the South Korean society at UIBE,
Shin recalled what she did when the crisis first hit home - getting everyone
together to find "ways to survive in these times."
There are more than 80,000 South Korean students
studying in China and most of them are from middle-class families, said
Professor Huang Youfu, director of the Institute of Korean Studies at the
Central University for Nationalities.
Almost 800,000 South Koreans are in China, Huang
said, adding that it was the Asian financial crisis in 1997 that helped them
become one of the largest foreign communities here.
"The previous financial crisis attracted a large
number of Korean enterprises to invest in China," Huang said. Trade volume
between the two countries boomed from 10 billion dollars in 2000 to more
than 160 billion dollars last year, he said.
Wangjing in northeastern Beijing, or "Korea Town", is
said to be home to about 30,000 South Koreans, housing one of the largest
numbers of the group in the capital.
The shops that line its streets sport more Korean
signage than Chinese ones. But recent media reports said many South Koreans had
left the area since the financial crisis broke out.
A real estate agent was quoted as saying that close
to half of his South Korean customers had canceled their housing rental
contracts recently. Another agent said he lost half of his South Korean
customers.
"The sharp devaluation of the won means Korean
investors would have to pay much more to do business than before. For some of
those entrepreneurs who need continuous investment, it is unbearable," Huang
told China Daily.
At a South Korean restaurant in Wangjing, waitress Li
Xin said most of her diners are students. But there have been visibly fewer
customers since October, she said.
"Normally, we have five or six tables full at noon
every day. Now, there are just two or three at the most," Li said. When China
Daily visited the 4-year-old restaurant, all of its 10 tables were empty.
For UIBE student Shin, meals now consist mainly of
rice and a simple soup she cooks herself. She has moved into a smaller
apartment, shared with another student.
She also takes the bus now, for trips between her
favorite haunts in Wudaokou in northwestern Beijing and Wangjing.
"It's only 1 yuan for the bus fare," she said.
Shin has also come across many of her South Korean
friends taking the public transport from home to campus. "That has never
happened before," Shin said.
Shin considers herself one of the lucky ones.
"We had already paid our tuition fees and rent in
advance, before the financial crisis," she said.
Back in Cheongju, her father works at a TV station.
Her mother, a piano teacher, said she has fewer students since the financial
turmoil started.
Faced with a plunging home currency and higher
tuition, a number of South Korean students are said to have headed home.
Shin said a college mate was thinking of going back
to South Korea to join the army before his scheduled 2-year army conscription,
continuing with his studies only when the crisis is over.
South Koreans in other parts of China are also
apparently struggling to stay afloat in these times.
In Chengdu, capital of Sichuan province, a local
newspaper reported that a Korean student was planning to open a language course
to earn money.
Many South Korean investments in China had actually
met with difficulties way before the crisis, "especially in Qingdao, Shandong
province, which attracted a large number of those enterprises in the past
years", Huang said.
In Qingdao, 87 South Korean entrepreneurs fled their
businesses late last year, Xinhua News Agency reported.
Rising labor costs, especially since the
implementation of the New Labor Law, was a major reason behind the demise of
such businesses, Huang said.
"The won's devaluation has made the problem worse and
we'll see more Korean entrepreneurs leaving in the short term," Huang said.
Still, Huang said all is not lost. The low value of
the won has already "bottomed out", he said.
"In about one year's time, I believe the exchange
rate will be restored to about 1 yuan to 170 won, and some of those South
Koreans who left would come back," he said.
Before the financial crisis, the South Korean embassy
expected the South Korean population in China to be as large as one million by
2010. Huang said this number should be possible, despite the current challenges.
"Life will definitely be much easier if the won went
back to 170, even 180, to 1 yuan," undergraduate Shin said.
(Source: China Daily/By Zhang Haizhou, Li
Aoxue)