Beauty as Strategy: Why K-Beauty Is Also a Political Success

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TEMPO.CO, Jakarta - First it was cars and electronics, then pop music and films, and now the beauty industry: skincare and cosmetics "made in Korea" are in demand all over the world.

More and more Westerners are raving about South Korean beauty products. This success is no coincidence, nor is it a purely aesthetic phenomenon.

The East Asian country has made its cultural exports an important source of soft power. What is known as "K-beauty" relies on a combination of cultural dynamics, economic strategy and geopolitical positioning. 

"Soft power means using attractiveness, not force, to influence others," explains political scientist and Korea expert Hannes Mosler from the University of Duisburg-Essen. This is crucial for a country like South Korea, he says.

"South Korea finds itself in a geopolitically precarious position between two major powers — which is why it's deliberately exploiting cultural attractiveness."

The strategy has proved very effective, with "K-beauty" now a global phenomenon.

The Yonhap news agency in Seoul reports that exports of cosmetic products increased by 12.3% in 2025, to a total value of $11.43 billion (€9.84 billion).

According to the South Korean ministry of trade and industry, cosmetic exports were already worth $10.2 billion in 2024.

South Korea on trend

But their success cannot be explained by economic statistics alone. The close connection between culture and consumption is decisive.

"Consumer trends reflect cultural trends," says Stefan Tobel, chief executive of Kencana in Hamburg, a company that specializes in importing and distributing Korean cosmetics.

"South Korea became a major presence on the global stage because of K-pop, and the consumer trends arrived with it."

This observation is supported by market research.

"The global rise of Korean pop culture, including K-pop and K-dramas, has had a significant role in expanding K-beauty worldwide," according to a report by the American market research company Grand View Research, which specializes in analyzing global consumer and technology markets.

Mosler goes one step further. "The Korean wave is not purely orchestrated by the government, but it had political support from very early on," he says.

He explains that the TV series, music and digital platforms have all created a cultural infrastructure that gives products worldwide visibility, meaning that K-beauty is "part of South Korea's wider image."

The international research network ResearchGate, which collates scientific work from around the world, points to studies that suggest Korean popular culture is being deliberately deployed as a tool of "nation branding," to bolster the country's international image.

Care, not concealment

When it comes to K-beauty, there's a unique understanding of skincare. "The Korean approach is much more sophisticated," Tobel explains. "Skin should not be covered up, but improved."

The London-based international consulting firm Euromonitor International specializes in market analysis and consumer goods. One of its studies indicates that, with Korean products, the focus is very much on prevention, skin health and long-term skincare.

Mosler sees this approach as one that comes from Korean society. "Outward appearance plays a very big role," he says.

He believes that an intense, competitive environment creates strong social pressure — and, with it, a particularly demanding market. "Products have to work to a very high standard in order to do well," he says.

The research supports this view. Grand View Research describes the K-beauty market as characterized by "rapid product innovation cycles to meet evolving consumer expectations."

The sector regards this dynamic as key, according to Tobel: "The market moves extremely fast. New ingredients, new formats, new routines. Anyone who isn't permanently innovating immediately loses relevance."

The role of social media

"Social media has a central role," Tobel continues. Platforms like TikTok and Instagram act as accelerators where trends are created and disseminated around the world, and K-beauty is particularly good at this.

Mosler stresses the importance of cultural multipliers. "K-pop stars or series create visibility and with it demand." Beauty products become part of an overall aesthetic and cultural package.

With that, it is clear that K-beauty is more than a trend: It is a system combining culture, technology, marketing and politics. "It's a question of attractiveness in both the cultural and the political sense," says Mosler. 

Read: 7 Top K-Beauty Trends for 2026: Minimalism, PDRN, and Bioactives

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