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Perceived Social Insecurity Across Support System Types: Comparing Young, Middle-Aged, and Elderly Adults

Title
Perceived Social Insecurity Across Support System Types: Comparing Young, Middle-Aged, and Elderly Adults
Alternative Author(s)

Byun, Geumsun

Keyword
Social Insecurity Inception ; Social Network ; Social Security Benefit Receipt Social Support System ; Age Groups
Publication Year
2025-06-30
Publisher
Korea Institute for Health and Social Affairs
Citation
Health and Social Welfare Review Vol.45 No.2, pp.624-649
Abstract
This study employs data from the Survey on the Experience and Perception of Social Issues in Korea to classify support systems—encompassing both public and private sources—into four distinct types. It then examines how these support system typologies are associated with individuals' perceptions of social insecurity. The findings indicate that individuals in lower-income groups experience significantly higher levels of deprivation in health and education compared to their higher-income counterparts. Furthermore, the distribution of support system types varies systematically by income level. Lower-income individuals are more likely to perceive society as insecure, and 12.7% of them fall into Type 1—characterized by a lack of both public and private support—compared to 7.9% in the higher-income group. Type 4, which denotes access to both public and private support, is most prevalent among the elderly (62.0%) and least among the late middle-aged (16.4%). The youth exhibit the second-highest proportion in this category after the elderly. Among younger individuals, those with lower incomes are more likely to perceive heightened social insecurity, and this perception is further shaped by the type of support system to which they belong. In contrast, the elderly demonstrate a somewhat different pattern: public support systems appear to partially mitigate perceived social insecurity in this group. This suggests that social security benefits may play a buffering role in alleviating the sense of insecurity associated with age-related social risks.
ISSN
1226-072X
DOI
10.15709/hswr.2025.45.2.624
KIHASA Research
Subject Classification
Income protection > Public income assistance
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