SEOUL, March 30 (AJP) - That K-content is widely loved is no longer in doubt. With K-pop-themed animation sweeping the Grammys and Oscars, and Netflix livestreaming BTS’ comeback, the latest data only puts a number to the momentum: nearly 70 percent approval worldwide.
According to data released Monday by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism and the Korea Foundation for International Cultural Exchange, 69.7 percent of respondents expressed favorable views toward Korean content in the 2026 Overseas Hallyu Survey.
The halo effect extends beyond entertainment. South Korea’s national image drew positive responses from 82.3 percent of global respondents — the highest since the survey began in 2012.
The surge is not just cultural, but economic. Content exports reached a record $14.08 billion in 2024, while inbound tourism rose to 18.9 million visitors in 2025, underscoring Hallyu’s growing weight as an export engine.
Momentum remains strongest in Southeast Asia, with the Philippines, India, Indonesia and Thailand leading in favorability. But the more telling shift is in the West, where gains have been sharper in markets such as the United Kingdom, the United States and Spain — a sign that Hallyu is still expanding its geographic footprint.
The wave itself has also broadened. While K-pop remains the core driver, consumption has spread across dramas, films, food and beauty — embedding Korean culture into everyday life rather than keeping it confined to entertainment.
That deeper penetration, however, is beginning to invite pushback.
Negative perceptions, unchanged at 37.5 percent, have risen steadily over the past five years, pointing to growing polarization as Hallyu becomes more visible — and harder to ignore.
Kim Hyung-jun, a professor of cultural anthropology at Kangwon National University, said the backlash is no longer driven by content alone but by the breadth of Hallyu’s reach.
“It is no longer confined to entertainment — it touches politics, the economy and social behavior,” he said.
He noted that criticism now cuts across multiple fronts.
“Concerns arise that young people are becoming less interested in local culture, while others point to excessive fan spending or changing social behaviors linked to fandom culture,” he said.
Because these concerns span everyday life, they are easily amplified by different groups — from politicians and religious leaders to parents — allowing negative sentiment to spread beyond those directly engaged with Korean content, Kim added.
Regional dynamics differ. In Southeast Asia, resistance is often tied to religious sensitivities and the financial burden of fandom consumption. In Western markets, it tends to center more on cultural influence and questions of relevance within established norms.
At the same time, the industry faces a more structural challenge: fatigue.
Im Jin-mo, a music critic and pop columnist, said K-pop may be approaching a turning point after more than a decade of global exposure.
“K-pop has not shown enough variety or newness,” he said. “The style has become more predictable.”
He warned that the genre may be entering a phase where it feels less fresh and less compelling to global audiences, with fewer new acts emerging to sustain momentum.
“This year could be a decisive moment,” he said. “The quality of new releases will matter more than ever.”
He also offered a blunt assessment of recent output from major acts.
“The album felt somewhat boring — it lacked a strong hook,” he said, adding that some see it as an early sign of a broader slowdown.
For now, Hallyu remains firmly in expansion mode. But as its reach widens, so too does the test of whether it can sustain not just scale, but staying power.
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