North Korean women in their 20s now refuse to date men without money or stable jobs

Young women in North Korea are increasingly unwilling to date or marry men who lack a stable income or clear earning potential, a sharp departure from norms that prevailed even a decade ago. A Daily NK source in South Pyongan province said Wednesday that women in their 20s in Pyongsong now treat fin

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North Korean women in their 20s now refuse to date men without money or stable jobs
north korean women
Women at a Pyongyang textile factory wearing T-shirts emblazoned with the DPRK's flag. (Rodong Sinmun - News1)

Young women in North Korea are increasingly unwilling to date or marry men who lack a stable income or clear earning potential, a sharp departure from norms that prevailed even a decade ago.

A Daily NK source in South Pyongan province said Wednesday that women in their 20s in Pyongsong now treat financial standing as the single most important criterion in choosing a partner. The shift has become widely recognized, with young men and their parents reportedly saying that without money, marriage has become difficult to achieve. “If a man has no money, he will grow old a bachelor” has become a common expression circulating in the city, the source said.

The change marks a significant reversal of patterns that took hold during and after North Korea’s famine period of the mid-1990s, commonly referred to inside the country as the Arduous March, when state food distribution effectively collapsed. During and after that period, women took the lead in informal market trading to keep their families fed. In many households, women became the primary breadwinners while men maintained the appearance of holding a state job, fulfilling a social expectation even when those jobs provided little or no income.

Marriage as a choice, not a social obligation

Under those conditions, men who contributed little economically were still considered viable marriage partners as long as they held a state work assignment. Women, meanwhile, often provided most of the wedding expenses themselves, with men sometimes arriving with almost nothing. The social pressure on women to marry by a certain age reinforced this dynamic, with unmarried women past their mid-20s facing stigma that pushed many into relationships regardless of their partner’s financial situation.

That calculation has now reversed among the current generation of young women, according to the source. Women who grew up watching their mothers bear the full economic burden of running a household are now resistant to accepting the same arrangement. “Most young women think: why should women alone work themselves to death supporting the household?” the source said. “Because earning is hard and life is tight, women without a financially stable partner would rather not marry at all and refuse to struggle alone.”

Men who hold state jobs that provide no real income are now seen as disqualifying, not merely uninspiring, as partners. The source said young women in Pyongsong will not date, let alone consider marrying, a man who lacks both a stable job and the income to match.

The source noted that young men have begun to respond to the shift. Aware that financial standing now determines their marriage prospects, more young men are actively seeking out work with real earning potential rather than simply accepting whatever state assignment they receive.

The generational break appears tied directly to the collapse of the state public distribution system. Young people born in the 2000s grew up in households where market activity was the norm and state support was largely absent. For that generation, the expectation that the state would provide has been replaced by the assumption that individuals must secure their own economic footing, and they are applying that assumption to marriage.

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Reporting from inside North Korea

Daily NK operates networks of sources inside North Korea who document events in real-time and transmit information through secure channels. Unlike reporting based on state media, satellite imagery, or defector accounts from years past, our journalism comes directly from people currently living under the regime. We verify reports through multiple independent sources and cross-reference details before publication.

Our sources remain anonymous because contact with foreign media is treated as a capital offense in North Korea — discovery means imprisonment or execution. This network-based approach allows Daily NK to report on developments other outlets cannot access: market trends, policy implementation, public sentiment, and daily realities that never appear in official narratives.

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