Chile vs South Korea
Side-by-side comparison of how these places approach childhood.
Chile
In Chile, every newborn receives a free 'Chile Crece Contigo' box with baby supplies from the government.
This universal program, inspired by Finland's baby box, delivers diapers, clothes, and parenting guides to every family โ a rare social policy achievement in South America.
South Korea
In South Korea, one exam at age 18 can shape a child's entire educational trajectory.
The Suneung exam is so high-stakes that planes are grounded, police escort latecomers, and the entire nation adjusts its schedule for test day.
Chile
School starts at age 6. Chile has one of the most market-driven education systems in South America, with public, subsidized-private, and fully private schools competing for students. School runs roughly 8 AM to 4 PM under the extended school day policy.
South Korea
Intensely competitive from elementary school onward. The public school day runs until 3-4 PM, but most students continue at private hagwon academies until 10 PM or later. South Korea spends more on private tutoring per student than any other OECD nation.
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