[AFL Column] When vacant rural homes transition from risk to asset

Published Nov 11, 2025

Tridge summary

[Rural Fisheries and Livestock Newspaper=Reporter Nam-jong Lee] The issue of vacant homes in rural areas is no longer just a matter for local management. More than half of the 134,000 vacant homes nationwide, approximately 78,000, are concentrated in rural areas, and this is not merely a case of neglected buildings but a structural result of the combination of population decline, aging, and the collapse of local communities. In the past, even with a decrease in the resident population, villages could still be maintained. However, currently in rural areas, vacant homes are emerging from the very center of villages, which is intensifying the cycle of deteriorating living conditions, accelerating population outflow, and deepening the risk of regional extinction. Vacant homes are thus a sign that reveals the future of the region.

Original content

The issue of vacant houses in rural and fishing villages is no longer a matter for local management alone. Of the 134,000 vacant houses nationwide, more than half, approximately 78,000, are concentrated in rural and fishing villages, and this is not merely a matter of abandoned buildings but a structural result of the combination of population decline, aging, and the collapse of local communities. In the past, even with a decrease in the resident population, villages could be maintained. However, currently in rural areas, vacant houses are emerging from the very center of villages, which strengthens the cycle of deteriorating living conditions, accelerating population outflow, and deepening the risk of regional extinction. Vacant houses should be addressed as a sign that indicates the future of the region. This issue was raised at a recent parliamentary discussion meeting for the establishment of the "Special Act on the Management of Vacant Houses in Rural and Fishing Villages," ...
Source: Aflnews

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