Uneven Ground: Busan, Incheon, and the Capital Bias

As South Korea continues to grapple with the challenges of balanced regional development, the cities of Busan and Incheon have emerged as symbolic competitors in a system still dominated by the gravitational pull of Seoul.

Uneven Ground: Busan, Incheon, and the Capital Bias
Breeze in Busan | Power, Policy, and the Busan–Incheon Divide

Busan, South Korea — In the ongoing national conversation about decentralization and balanced regional development, the cities of Busan and Incheon have emerged as high-profile contestants—not merely in pursuit of government institutions or symbolic projects, but as proxies in a much broader struggle for relevance, resources, and recognition in a country long dominated by its capital region. Their simultaneous bids to host the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries, the first Maritime Court, and the designation of South Korea’s inaugural national urban park are not isolated cases of municipal ambition. Rather, they reflect deeper structural imbalances that have shaped South Korea’s territorial governance since its rapid industrialization.

Busan, once known unambiguously as the country’s second city, is now grappling with a steady erosion of its status, outpaced economically and demographically by Incheon—a city that, by virtue of its proximity to Seoul, has risen as an extension of the capital’s gravitational field. While Incheon’s port grows busier, and its corporate footprint expands, Busan faces depopulation, youth outmigration, and the slow contraction of its traditional manufacturing base. In this context, the current debates around institutional relocation and national investment take on new urgency.

The most politically salient of these is the proposal to relocate the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries (MOF) to Busan. Advocates argue that such a move would not only bring government closer to the country’s largest maritime hub, but also signal a substantive commitment to decentralization—a principle that has often been rhetorically championed but inconsistently applied in practice. Opponents, particularly in the Incheon maritime sector, warn that the relocation could marginalize the capital region’s logistical advantages and create inefficiencies in policy responsiveness. However, this framing of the issue as a regional turf war obscures the more fundamental problem: South Korea’s development remains anchored to a Seoul-centric model that systematically privileges proximity over potential.

Statistical trends reinforce this. According to the latest data from Statistics Korea, Incheon’s Gross Regional Domestic Product (GRDP) surpassed that of Busan for the first time in 2023, reaching approximately 116.9 trillion KRW compared to Busan’s 114.2 trillion KRW. In just eight years, the economic gap between the two cities reversed, driven largely by the accelerated integration of Incheon into the capital region’s supply chains, talent networks, and real estate markets. During this period, Incheon’s GRDP grew by nearly 43%, while Busan’s expanded by less than 29%.

Population and labor force data tell a similar story. While Busan’s population fell by nearly 150,000 over the past five years, Incheon added close to 70,000 residents. For the first time in 2024, Incheon surpassed Busan in economically active population—an inflection point that illustrates not only demographic change but a redistribution of opportunity. These shifts have occurred in tandem with other indicators: Incheon’s real estate values remain more stable, its youth retention rate is higher, and its share of high-value corporate headquarters is growing.

Yet Busan’s decline is not merely the result of internal inefficiencies or demographic misfortune. It reflects a systemic problem: the structural favoring of the capital region in national planning, fiscal policy, and infrastructural investment. Seoul and its satellite cities host the majority of public institutions, elite universities, think tanks, and corporate headquarters. Even Sejong, established as an administrative capital, functions more as an extension of this axis than a truly decentralized node. In such an environment, cities like Busan are left not only physically distant, but increasingly marginalized in terms of access to state power and decision-making.

This is why the proposed MOF relocation matters—not because Busan is entitled to a government ministry, but because relocating it there would represent a meaningful shift in how South Korea understands proximity and power. It would challenge the default assumption that critical governance functions must remain near Seoul, and open space for more regionally responsive, functionally grounded administration.

This logic extends to the competition over the Maritime Court. Both Busan and Incheon present strong cases: Busan boasts the country’s largest container port, extensive shipping networks, and a concentration of maritime industries and educational institutions. Incheon, strategically located on the Yellow Sea, plays a key role in trade with northern China and the broader Northeast Asian economic corridor. Yet the very fact that two major cities must campaign so aggressively for such a court reveals a lack of pre-established criteria and regional planning frameworks within central government decision-making. Instead of designing a long-term blueprint for legal and administrative decentralization, Seoul’s ministries often adjudicate such matters reactively, through political compromise or lobbying pressure.

The same pattern is visible in the ongoing bid to designate the first national urban park. Busan’s proposed site encompasses the Eulsukdo and Maekdo ecological reserves, covering over 5.6 million square meters of valuable wetland habitat at the mouth of the Nakdong River. Incheon counters with its own proposal centered on the Sorae Wetlands, a smaller but ecologically significant zone that is home to multiple endangered species. Both cities have mobilized lawmakers, environmental advocates, and public campaigns to support their claims, and both are seeking revisions to the Park and Green Space Act that would lower the minimum area required for designation. While the environmental merits of each site are clear, what’s more telling is how each city feels the need to compete—because in the current system, symbolic recognition and central government funding are often awarded to only one.

Ultimately, these episodes underscore a structural dilemma: in a hyper-centralized governance model, regional cities must compete not only against each other, but against the capital region's embedded advantages. What may appear as local rivalry is in fact the predictable result of a winner-takes-most development strategy that lacks long-term mechanisms for distributive fairness or multi-nodal growth.

It is not that competition between cities is inherently unhealthy—on the contrary, it can drive innovation, civic pride, and policy experimentation. But when that competition is zero-sum, when the rules are unclear, and when the capital region is insulated from the same pressures, the result is not dynamism but disparity.

For cities like Busan, whose industrial foundation is under pressure and whose youth population is declining, the stakes are existential. Without strategic investment, decentralization of state functions, and the empowerment of regional governance, Busan and other non-capital cities may find themselves permanently locked in a downward spiral. Meanwhile, the capital region continues to grow, attracting talent, infrastructure, and capital—not because of deliberate policy, but because of historical momentum and accumulated advantage.

As South Korea looks ahead to the next chapter of its national development, the rivalry between Busan and Incheon should not be dismissed as provincial posturing. It is, in fact, a mirror reflecting the country’s unresolved contradictions: between rhetoric and reality, centralization and autonomy, growth and sustainability. The challenge now is not to choose one city over another, but to craft a governance model in which regional vitality is not dependent on winning occasional contests, but on systemic support and structural parity.

Until that happens, the geography of opportunity in South Korea will remain as uneven as ever—and the competition for attention, institutions, and investment will only intensify.