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Visitors to Korea often remark on how thin Koreans-and Korean women in particular-are. Korea’s obesity rate for girls (16.2%) was also higher than that for girls in several other OECD nations such as Turkey, Norway, and France, albeit still better than most of the rest, and nowhere near as bad as the United States (35.0%) and Greece (45.0%). While obesity rates are extremely low, 30.5% of Koreans were “overweight.” That’s still a good number compared to other OECD nations, but it is considerably higher than Japan, where just 24.9% of the population was overweight. The data also shows that these rates have held steady over the last decade, in contrast to many other OECD states where rates have climbed (and in stark contrast to the United States, where rates have skyrocketed). As of 2009, Korea’s obesity rate was just 3.8%, slightly below the second thinnest nation, Japan, and rating pretty well against non-OECD states India (2.1%), Indonesia (2.4%), and China (2.9%). In an increasingly spherical world, Korean obesity rates are shockingly low. OECD statistics bear out the Korean miracle. With obesity a growing problem in much of the developed world, why do Koreans remain so thin? What’s their secret?
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The online store noted that while A- and B-cup sales have fallen from 92% of all bra sales in 2010 to 69% last year, C-cup sales have skyrocketed from 8% to 23%. As further evidence, the Shinsegae Department Store’s online store now has a section dedicated to “big-sized” bras of C-cup and over. Not only are Koreans thin, but their bodies are becoming more “Westernized.” According to a recent study by the Ministry of Knowledge Economy’s Korean Agency for Technology and Standards, middle-aged Korean men and women are growing thinner and their legs are growing longer, which the ministry attributed to changes in diet and increased exercise. At the far opposite end-with an emoticon so thin you’d almost have to squint to see it-are the Koreans, with an obesity rate of just 3%. Firmly planted at the most globular end of the graph were, naturally enough, the pleasantly plump Americans, with a national obesity rate of 31%. The graph, composed of “emoticons” that grew increasingly spherical in accordance with national obesity rates, caused quite a stir. While developed world gets fatter, Koreans remain remarkably thinĪ graph of obesity rates by nation was posted on the website of a Korean online community.