Most Popular
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Actor Jung Woo-sung admits to being father of model Moon Ga-bi’s child
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Wealthy parents ditch Korean passports to get kids into international school
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Man convicted after binge eating to avoid military service
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First snow to fall in Seoul on Wednesday
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Industry experts predicts tough choices as NewJeans' ultimatum nears
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Final push to forge UN treaty on plastic pollution set to begin in Busan
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Nvidia CEO signals Samsung’s imminent shipment of AI chips
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Opposition chief acquitted of instigating perjury
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Korea to hold own memorial for forced labor victims, boycotting Japan’s
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[Exclusive] Hyundai Mobis eyes closer ties with BYD
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[Christina Seo] Millennials have own ways to access election info
I am a 24-year-old, Korean-American post-grad, and I have been reading about every turn of this year’s presidential campaign entirely on my phone, mostly right before bed. Yes, it is a bad habit, and yes, the blue light is suppressing my pineal gland from releasing delicious melatonin into my brain, but I wouldn’t want to get my news any other way.If in my late-night reading I am not being smothered in “Make America Great Again” Donald Trump Sauce, I am usually consuming article after article ab
April 4, 2016
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[Jean Pisani-Ferry] Preparing for potential recession in Europe
If you do not understand what is happening to the eurozone economy, you are not alone. One day we are told that growth is definitely passe; the next that recovery is on track; and the third that the European Central Bank is considering sending checks to all citizens to boost output and revive inflation. Rarely has the economic picture been so confusing.Let’s start with medium-term growth. Since the global financial crisis erupted in 2008, productivity has grown at a snail’s pace. Oddly, the smar
April 4, 2016
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[Adam Minter] China wants to power the world
China’s State Grid Corporation, the world’s biggest power company, is on an impressive buying binge. As Bloomberg News reports, the company is “actively in bidding” for power assets in Australia, hoping to add them to a portfolio of Italian, Brazilian and Filipino companies. The goal isn’t simply to invest, however. State Grid’s Chairman Liu Zhenya has a plan that he believes will stall global warming, put millions of people to work and bring about world peace by 2050.The idea is to connect thes
April 4, 2016
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Downside of the minimum wage fad
Raising wages by government fiat seems to be catching on. The lowest-paid workers in Britain and California — two of the world’s largest economies — are only the latest beneficiaries of plans to lift the minimum wage.The goal in every case is commendable, but the method is far from ideal. On Friday, Britain’s minimum wage will increase to 7.20 pounds ($10.36) an hour for workers age 25 and older, rising each year until it is expected to be above 9 pounds by 2020. California has agreed to set a $
April 4, 2016
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[J. Bradford DeLong] Debunking America’s populist narrative
One does not need to be particularly good at hearing to decipher the dog whistles being used during this year’s election campaign in the United States. Listen even briefly, and you will understand that Mexicans and Chinese are working with Wall Street to forge lousy trade deals that rob American workers of their rightful jobs, and that Muslims want to blow everyone up. All of this fear mongering is scarier than the usual election-year fare. It is frightening to people in foreign countries, who c
April 3, 2016
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[David Ignatius] China’s political turbulence
China’s intelligence service, the Ministry of State Security, offers a snapshot of the political intrigue taking place within the regime of President Xi Jinping. The MSS has replaced two vice ministers within the last four years, after reports of political infighting and scandal. The current minister is said to be a figurehead, with the real power held by a hard-line Xi loyalist who was drafted last year from the party’s discipline commission. This shake-up within the intelligence service mirr
April 3, 2016
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[Elizabeth Drew] Causes behind Trump’s Republican success
Whatever becomes of his candidacy — whether he wins the Republican Party’s nomination or is even elected president of the United States — Americans and the rest of the world will be wondering for a long time how the phenomenon of Donald Trump happened. They are already doing so. The first thing to understand is that American political parties have nothing to do with who runs for the U.S. presidency. In fact, U.S. political parties amount to a collection of functionaries who arrange the process o
April 3, 2016
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[Michael R. Bloomberg & Joe Biden] Curing cancer within reach
One of the most frightening words a patient can hear from a doctor is “cancer.” We know it from the experience of our families and friends, and the millions of Americans who hear it directly from their doctors each year. In President Barack Obama’s final State of the Union address, he compared the effort required to eradicate cancer to a “moon shot,” summoning the American ingenuity and scientific pursuits that sent humankind to the moon. We believe that it’s time for a full and complete nationa
April 3, 2016
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[N. Balakrishnan] Hong Kong’s refugee vetting system failing
As anyone who steps out of their home knows, it takes money to travel, and the further away from home you are, the more money it takes. We have to keep this in mind when we read about ill-informed news reports about “penniless” refugees and “asylum” seekers who somehow manage to travel halfway across the world with supposedly not a penny to their name! Hong Kong has recently seen increasing numbers of people from places such as Somalia, India and Pakistan arriving to seek “asylum.” Logic dictate
April 3, 2016
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[Tobin Harshaw] ‘Free rider’ allies are paying up
Defense alliances are complicated things, but in the U.S. we have bipartisan clarity on one thing: Our allies are letting us down.“If Saudi Arabia was without the cloak of American protection,“ Republican frontrunner Donald Trump said this weekend, ”I don’t think it would be around.” He has also shamed America’s top defense partners in Asia: Japan and South Korea. “We have 28,000 people on the border separating South Korea from this maniac in North Korea. We get nothing,” he said. “We get nothin
April 1, 2016
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Looking at the reality of virtual reality
In coming days, people will leave our world for a new realm of gunslingers, cyberbots and other exotic sights. Their ticket out of here will be the Oculus Rift — a $600 virtual reality headset hitting the consumer market.Hmm, even from here we can see, through regular prescription spectacles, that you are unimpressed. You wonder if virtual reality is another goofy, expensive fad like 3-D television. You also remember hearing about Google Glass, the $1,500 augmented-reality eyeglasses that allowe
April 1, 2016
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Political dynasties block level playing field
According to the Inquirer’s latest count, at least 542 candidates in the May 9 elections are considered sure winners. Not because of superior odds against their opponent — the result of a better program of governance, perhaps, or a more effective grassroots campaign — but simply by default: They are running unopposed.One may argue, as congressman Arthur Defensor of Iloilo does, that the lack of any adversary in what ought to be an exercise in choosing from a healthy plurality of options is, of a
March 31, 2016
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Outdoors in China
Climate change is a new facet of life in developing and emerging economies; keeping with the environmental spirit of the times, China’s 13th five-year plan sets out a path of sustainable development for its economic growth. The country has unveiled new strategies to tackle climate change and the plan is expected to achieve nonbinding targets set at the Paris Climate Conference and will exceed expectations set in the Copenhagen accord of 2009. According to the World Resources Institute, an enviro
March 31, 2016
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[Tulsathit Taptim] Woes of early, advanced democracies
The sound you hear is America’s Democrats uncorking the champagne. As much as the insane part of me wants Republican Donald Trump to be the next U.S. president, I think the man has blown his chance. Although his country’s democracy allows him to do practically anything to win the nomination for the presidential race, attacking a rival by tweeting an unflattering photo of his wife is more than just hitting below the belt.Not every jaw has dropped, however. “He’s very human and down to earth,” ent
March 31, 2016
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Japan’s DP must question its ability to take power
The Democratic Party of Japan marked a fresh start as the Democratic Party in the wake of a merger with the Japan Innovation Party.The DPJ lost the reins of government after a House of Representatives election in 2012. Since then, opposition parties have lacked momentum.The DPJ had been unable to regain support, and other opposition parties that labeled themselves as third-pole forces had also run out of steam.If opposition parties that had split into smaller parties are united again, it will sp
March 31, 2016
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[Rachel Marsden] The most dangerous form of tyranny is weakness
It isn’t easy to be a strong leader in an era of progressives hell-bent on societal destruction. Refusing to compromise when faced with the tyranny of “progressive” reform is difficult at a time when so many leaders are allowing their countries to slip into oblivion under the guise of some greater leftist “good.”Following the recent Islamic State group terrorist attacks in Belgium that killed at least 35 people and injured more than 300, Belgian police blasted a water cannon at about 200 anti-im
March 31, 2016
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[David Ignatius] Warning against overuse of sanctions
Economic sanctions have become the “silver bullet” of American foreign policy over the last decade, because they’re cheaper and more effective in compelling adversaries than traditional military power. But Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew warns of a “risk of overuse” that could neuter the sanctions weapon and harm America. Lew made his unusual case against “sanctions overreach” in an interview last week, and in a speech prepared for the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. His caution against
March 31, 2016
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[Laura Wharton] Settling the status of Jerusalem is a priority
Jerusalem is not one city, but two. Nearly 50 years after Israel captured East Jerusalem, the city remains as divided as ever. As its neighborhoods suffer from a new wave of violence, acknowledging this reality is becoming increasingly urgent. Settling the status of Jerusalem – as two cities, one for Israelis and one for Palestinians – must be made a priority if peace between the two sides is ever to be achieved.The 1947 United Nations Partition Plan called for the division of British-controlled
March 30, 2016
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The children of Fukushima: When medical tests mislead
Five years ago, the Fukushima nuclear power plant disaster spread deadly radiation by land and by sea. In the years since, Japan and the rest of the world have learned many lessons about why the reactor failed and how to prevent another such catastrophes. But one of the most intriguing lessons of Fukushima involves hundreds of thousands of Japanese children potentially exposed to excessive radiation.Japanese public health officials were aware of an increased incidence of thyroid cancer in Russia
March 30, 2016
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[Kim Myong-sik] Elections jeopardize still fragile Korean democracy
My first exposure to democracy was when I was a student at Jaedong Elementary School. My class had to elect a president. The school was one of the earliest public education institutes in Korea, situated in the old residential zone of Seoul, in what is now Bukchon. The principal, a man of small frame with a booming voice, constantly beseeched us to love our nation. During weekly assemblies, he used to display a faded, old national flag that the school had somehow preserved from the country’s colo
March 30, 2016