Current location - Recipe Complete Network - Complete breakfast recipes - What is the standard of living in Korea with a monthly salary of 700,000-800,000 won? How much is the basic living standard in Korea? thank you
What is the standard of living in Korea with a monthly salary of 700,000-800,000 won? How much is the basic living standard in Korea? thank you
direct quotations

100 won for 0.730 1 RMB.

Indirect pricing method

1 yuan RMB is equal to 1 18.5788 won.

(Please refer to today's exchange rate.)

Based on this conversion, we can know that the monthly salary of 700,000-800,000 won is about 5110.7-5,840.8 yuan. Judging from the high consumption level in Korea, this salary is only equivalent to the salary level of ordinary working-class people in China.

The minimum is about 300,000-2,500 RMB, with no ceiling. In Seoul (Seoul), ordinary life needs about 500,000-4,000 RMB per month.

Accommodation is how much money you have, and you can find whatever you want.

You can eat every meal from 2000 to 5000, and you can choose it yourself. There is no standard for food at all, and it depends on your personal living habits.

If you don't live in a dormitory, utilities, network fees, transportation and other expenses will be around 5 5- 10/00000 per month. Of course, this also depends on personal use, and there is no uniformity.

Therefore, the minimum accommodation of 300,000 yuan should be considered alive every month.

Attachment: South Korea's price level quotation

The price of Korean beef (tenderloin) is $48.09 per kilogram, ranking second in the world after Japan ($76.52 per kilogram). The price of apples and potatoes also ranks second in the world, which is 77% and 1 1 0% higher than that of the United States. Milk is twice as expensive as America. The price of pork is per kilogram 13. 1 USD, ranking fourth in the world after Norway, Switzerland and other countries.

South Korea's rising rate of consumer prices ranks sixth among OECD countries, and South Korea ranks among the countries with high prices in the world. In particular, the prices of major foods, beverages and daily necessities such as beef, pork, milk powder, diapers and sanitary napkins have exceeded the level of major developed countries. According to the analysis of Chosun Ilbo, from 2000 to June 2006, South Korea's consumer price increase rate was 20.3%, ranking sixth among OECD members after Turkey (277%), Hungary (37.6%), Mexico (30.0%) and Spain (22.2%).