A municipal service desk in Amsterdam where bilingual administration facilitates direct communication with foreign residents.
AMSTERDAM · June 3, 2026
As Seoul voters head to the polls today, the incoming mayor inherits a city at a demographic crossroads. While South Korea’s national policies focus on fertility incentives, the urban reality in Seoul is defined by an expanding foreign-born population that remains structurally disconnected from the civic core. Amsterdam’s experience suggests that the primary barrier to integration is not cultural, but linguistic: specifically, the language of the city’s "operating system."
The Hidden Cost of Parallel Bureaucracy
In Seoul, foreign residents navigate the city through a layer of intermediaries: translation apps, specialized global centers, and multilingual hotlines like the 120 Dasan Call Center. While helpful, these are support layers, not civic participation. Official administration remains strictly Korean-only. This creates "parallel societies" where residents are served but not included. Amsterdam recognized that when a resident cannot navigate city bureaucracy without an intermediary, they remain a guest rather than a member.
Amsterdam’s "Operating System" Upgrade
Amsterdam’s high social integration scores are the result of a deliberate budget decision: treating English as a functional civic operating language. By investing in bilingual city services and the "IN Amsterdam" one-stop desk, the city removed the "linguistic tax" on residency. This was not a move to replace Dutch, but a strategic infrastructure project to ensure that talent: regardless of origin: can register, pay taxes, and access schools directly. It moved the integration score by making the city’s administration accessible by design.
A Budget Decision for the New Mayor
For Seoul’s next mayor, the lesson from Amsterdam is that bilingualism is a budget item, not a cultural debate. Investing in a bilingual municipal workforce and English-medium administrative pathways is the only way to scale the city’s capacity to absorb the global talent its economy now requires. The arithmetic of decline does not wait for language acquisition; the city that speaks the language of its residents is the only one that can successfully integrate them.
Source: https://news.bcd-w.com


