1. The clinical meaning of Korea's household debt
International comparison (IMF 2024):
| Country | Household debt / GDP |
|---|---|
| Korea | 105% |
| Australia | 110% |
| Canada | 103% |
| UK | 83% |
| US | 74% |
| Japan | 65% |
| Germany | 54% |
Accelerating factors: 1) housing price spikes (average jeonse loan 100M+ KRW), 2) youth crypto / stock leverage, 3) self-employed COVID debt, 4) high-interest card / savings-bank loans, 5) childcare and education costs.
2. The debt – mental-health link
| Metric | Relative to no-debt group | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Depression risk | ×3.2 | Richardson et al., 2013 meta-analysis |
| Suicidal ideation | ×2.7 | Meltzer et al., 2011 |
| Suicide attempts | ×3.3 | Hatcher, 1994 |
| Divorce rate | ×2.0 | Dew & Yorgason, 2010 |
| Cardiovascular disease | ×1.4 | Sweet et al., 2013 |
| Diabetes risk | ×1.3 | Drentea & Reynolds, 2012 |
Notably: the #1 motive of Korean suicide is "economic problems" (33%, Statistics Korea, 2023).
3. "Cognitive tunneling" — the cognitive damage of poverty
Mullainathan & Shafir, "Scarcity" (Princeton, 2013):
- Indian sugarcane-farmer experiment: just before harvest (scarcity), IQ dropped by an average of 13 points; right after harvest (income), it recovered.
- Financial scarcity concentrates cognitive resources on "how do I survive this month?", incapacitating long-term planning and self-control.
- Result: signing up for high-interest loans, gambling, fraud victimization, worse child-rearing decisions.
Clinical implication: "why do poor people make worse decisions?" is not "lack of willpower" but "environment damaging cognition". So pure financial education is not enough — system support is required.
4. Korea's debt-resolution systems
① Credit Counseling and Recovery Service (CCRS, 1397, free)
- For debts in default 30+ days, total ≤ 1.5B KRW (secured) / ≤ 500M (unsecured)
- Interest reduction, partial principal reduction, 8-year installments
- 100% free consultation, 50 branches nationwide
- Applicant confidentiality protected
② Personal rehabilitation (court)
- 3–5 years of repayment from disposable income, then discharge of residual debt
- Total debt ≤ 1.5B (secured) / ≤ 1B (unsecured)
- Lawyer fee 2–4M KRW (free via Korea Legal Aid Corporation for low-income)
③ Personal bankruptcy (court)
- For those without repayment capacity
- Discharge → debt zero
- Limited disqualification (civil service, certain licenses) for 7 years
④ Small-debt discharge
- Debts ≤ 15M KRW with 5+ years of inability to repay
- Introduced in 2021, prioritizes youth
5. Treat debt and depression together
Solving the finances alone leaves depression; treating only depression leaves poor financial-decision capacity. Simultaneous approach:
Week 1: Mental-health assessment
- PHQ-9 (depression) and GAD-7 (anxiety) self-tests
- Direct check for suicidal ideation
- Free mental-health welfare center or psychiatry
Week 2: Objectify the debt
- List every debt (creditor, amount, rate, maturity)
- Clarify monthly income and essential expenses
- Free integrated credit info lookup via the Financial Supervisory Service
Week 3: CCRS consultation
- Book a free 1397 consultation
- Get guidance on which system fits (CCRS, rehabilitation, bankruptcy)
Week 4 onwards: enter the system
- Apply for the chosen system
- Parallel mental-health treatment
- Be honest with family / spouse (reduces divorce / cutoff risk)
6. Coping with cognitive tunneling
- Make important decisions when cognitive resources peak: mornings, after meals, well-slept
- Auto-reject high-interest loans and new-card offers: "I'll answer after 24 hours"
- Share important documents with a friend / family: external validation
- Auto-payments on payday reduce decision burden
- Delete gambling and crypto apps: cut impulses at the source
7. Warning signs of "financial suicide"
- "My death would clear my family's debt"
- Buying / increasing life insurance, checking suicide exclusion clauses
- Tidying belongings, sharing important passwords
- Frequent "I'm sorry" to family
- Farewell messages on social media / messenger
If you see these signs, call 1577-0199 / 1393 immediately. The person may fantasize that "if I disappear, insurance / assets will clear the debt for my family", but most Korean policies exclude suicide for 2 years AND debt can be handled with "limited acceptance" so it doesn't pass to family. Resolution through CCRS / courts while alive is always possible.
8. Youth recovery after leveraged investing
- Acceptance: accept losses (give up the "break-even" fantasy)
- Stop: delete trading apps, block additional losses
- Counseling: CCRS, youth-debt-specialized counseling
- Reconstruction: rebuild a stable income flow over 1+ year, give up the "recover fast" compulsion
- Psychotherapy: assess for gambling / investing addiction
9. Korean resources
- Credit Counseling and Recovery Service 1397 (free, 50 branches)
- Korea Legal Aid Corporation 132 (free legal advice for low-income)
- Financial Supervisory Service 1332 (report illegal lending)
- Korea Inclusive Finance Agency 1397
- Korea Center on Gambling Problems 1336
- Suicide prevention 1577-0199 / 1393