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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Industry experts predicts tough choices as NewJeans' ultimatum nears
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Opposition chief acquitted of instigating perjury
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Seoul city opens emergency care centers
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[Exclusive] Hyundai Mobis eyes closer ties with BYD
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[Herald Review] 'Gangnam B-Side' combines social realism with masterful suspense, performance
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Why S. Korean refiners are reluctant to import US oil despite Trump’s energy push
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Agency says Jung Woo-sung unsure on awards attendance after lovechild revelations
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Prosecutors seek 5-year prison term for Samsung chief in merger retrial
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UN talks on plastic pollution treaty begin with grim outlook
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[Michael Schuman] To fix China, look to Korea
Earlier this week, markets made clear how little they think of China’s attempts to revamp the giant, state-owned companies that dominate its economy. After the government approved the merger of two massive shipping groups, two of their listed subsidiaries swiftly shed more than $850 million in value Monday. Investors appear to appreciate something the regime doesn’t: Simply tweaking the structure of state-owned enterprises -- professionalizing their management, inviting in private investors and
Dec. 18, 2015
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[David Fogarty] Paris agreement kick-starts global energy revolution
The world has just signed one of the most important agreements in history. More than just an environmental pact, the Paris climate change agreement will kick-start a global energy revolution. Nearly 200 nations in Paris have signed on to an agreement under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change that the world has to go on a carbon diet, signaling an end to dirty fossil fuels and deforestation, and giving green energy a big boost. Every year, we pump far more carbon dioxide i
Dec. 17, 2015
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[Chon Shi-yong] Mavericks in Korean politics
On the surface, Ahn Cheol-soo left the New Politics Alliance for Democracy party because leader Moon Jae-in did not accept his demand to elect new leadership to reform the party beset by successive election defeats and severe internal feuding. But one of the real reasons may be that he came to realize the party would be unable to provide the platform he needed to achieve his dream of becoming president. He did say the NPAD did not have any chance of ending the rule of the conservative Saenuri P
Dec. 17, 2015
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Tackling plastic waste, in honor of Paris pact
On Sept. 15, 15 retailing companies joined hands to launch the no-plastic bag campaign, urging consumers to bring their own bags when shopping at their venues on the 15th of each month. In return, additional discounts are on offer at some shopping centers. These retailers also plan to step up the efforts, by increasing the number of no-bag shopping days. For weeks, TV channel Thai PBS has launched the anti-plastic bag campaign. Celebrities have shown their faces, telling the sad stories about
Dec. 17, 2015
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Privileges make mockery of the public
Last Saturday, EBC broadcast footage of a road block on Freeway No. 3 resulting from Democratic Progressive Party vice-presidential candidate Chen Chien-jen’s motorcade passing through for an election campaign event. The fuming passenger who shot the video footage complained that politicians seemed to forget that ordinary citizens also have their own business to conduct and schedules to accede to. It was not immediately clear whether Chen was aware that the cordon had been put in place for him
Dec. 17, 2015
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Braced for Fed move
The rupiah fell to as low as 14,120 against the U.S. dollar on Monday, in part due to the U.S. Federal Reserve starting its monthly meetings on Tuesday, because the majority of analysts around the world are expecting the U.S. central bank to finally raise its benchmark interest rate, which is currently close to zero, by at least a quarter of a percentage point. Currencies and stocks in most other emerging economies are also on a roller coaster again as things remain in flux after several postpo
Dec. 17, 2015
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The Fed’s new normal and fiscal policy
Wednesday’s announcement that the Federal Reserve will raise its benchmark interest rate by a quarter of a percentage point may be the most widely anticipated news in the history of U.S. monetary policy. Had Fed Chair Janet Yellen said anything else, investors would have been stunned. All the pre-event chatter made the move mandatory. Fortunately, the decision was also correct, because slack in the labor market has diminished to the point where monetary policy needs to gradually get back to nor
Dec. 17, 2015
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[Kim Ji-hyun] ‘As it is,’ it’s a man’s world
One of the first Japanese words I learned was “sonomama.” What it means is, “just as it is.” For instance, to ask a cab driver to go straight “as you are” for a while, you could say “sonomama matsugu kudasai.” But I actually learned sonomama the hard way. A couple months ago in my Tokyo neighborhood, I was trying to buy some fish to fry. When the sales clerk asked me if I would take it “sonomama,” I just nodded. Turns out, fish a la sonomama means taking it as it is, innards and all. From my poi
Dec. 16, 2015
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[Bernard-Henri Levy] The French rally to the republic after far-right scare
Before the second round of France’s regional elections on Sunday, most predictions suggested that five, perhaps six, of the country’s regional governments would fall into the hands of the National Front (FN). But the French people pulled themselves together and turned out to vote in much greater numbers than anyone expected. The result is that a xenophobic, racist party, one hostile to everything essential to the spirit and greatness of France, was defeated in all of the contests that it was sup
Dec. 16, 2015
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Stiglitz’s sticky prices give lessons on unemployment
For a long time, the assumption underlying much of mainstream economics was that the invisible hand worked its magic seamlessly. Prices moved smoothly up as demand outpaced supply and rushed back down when the tables were turned, keeping markets in equilibrium. To be sure, many observers realized the truth was actually quite different — that prices, and wages and interest rates in particular, were often sticky, and that this sometimes prevented markets from clearing. In labor markets, this meant
Dec. 16, 2015
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Cruz taps into disaffected conservatives’ anger
All year long, smart Republicans have been whispering: Keep a close eye on Ted Cruz. He’s got a message that appeals to the party’s most conservative voters. He’s running a good campaign, well organized and well funded. He’s going to be a finalist — and he might just win the nomination. Well, what do you know: Right on schedule, as voters in Iowa settle on their favorites, Cruz’s fortunes are looking up. A Monmouth University poll released last week found Cruz in first place among Iowans who are
Dec. 16, 2015
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In Myanmar, malaria brings political changes
Myanmar is emerging from 50 years of isolation and military rule slowly. Even after the victory of the pro-democracy party in November elections, the country is fragile and fragmented. The military still holds much political power. The country is struggling with entrenched poverty. Decades of ethnic and regional warfare have left Myanmar with more armed groups than there are candidates in the U.S. Republican presidential primary. What could improve this situation? Maybe malaria. Last summer in W
Dec. 16, 2015
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[Lee Jae-min] A climate pact with real teeth
As noted law expert Michael Akehurst once opined, treaties are the “maids-of-all-work” for international law. Many countries conclude numerous treaties regularly, with Korea alone signing roughly 100 bilateral or multilateral treaties each year. All treaties have a legally binding force and contracting states are obligated to abide by them. The nature of the binding force, however, varies from treaty to treaty. Some are enforced with rigorous force through a binding dispute settlement mechanism,
Dec. 15, 2015
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[Kim Seong-kon] Korean division in Duke University Library
Perhaps it is an occupational hazard, but whenever I visit a city, whether domestic or foreign, I drop by the major university there. The first place I visit on campus is the main library. Surrounded by books and bookshelves, I am thrilled as if I were standing before the infinite universe. In “Nature,” Emerson wrote, “Standing on the bare ground — my head bathed by the blithe air, and uplifted into infinite space — all mean egotism vanishes. I become a transparent eyeball; I am nothing; I see
Dec. 15, 2015
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What I found on the other side of class divide
In the late 1970s, I went to Kingswood Oxford School and later Loomis Chaffee School. A member of the exclusive prep school club of Connecticut, mine was an insulated life of wealth and privilege. To me, the rules were clear: Chase those who are ahead, outrun those who are behind and ignore everyone outside my world because they’re irrelevant. My cozy life was forever altered in the fall of my sophomore year at Loomis. My mother left her family and our swanky home in Hartford’s West End to marry
Dec. 15, 2015
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A banner year for behavioral science
Behavioral science has become the usual term for psychological and economic research on human behavior, often designed to explore people’s biases and blunders. For that research, 2015 has been a banner year, with an unusually large number of important books. Five of them stand out — and two of these weren’t even written by social scientists. “Phishing for Phools,” by George Akerlof and Robert Shiller, is an instant classic. Akerlof and Shiller contend that free markets lead companies to “phish”
Dec. 15, 2015
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Paris climate pact is just a beginning
Given the grave danger posed by unchecked climate change, it’s understandable that concerned citizens worldwide would want to hail the historic carbon-emission deal inked in Paris last weekend. And, in fact, getting consensus from 195 nations with varying levels of economic and political development — let alone environmental consciousness — is a remarkable diplomatic accomplishment. But with climate scientists stating that the nonbinding agreement won’t fully solve the problem — even if it’s ful
Dec. 15, 2015
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A deal worth celebrating
Governments have taken a vital step in confronting global warming. Until now, there was no universal commitment to address the problem, no common target and no system for measuring progress. The Paris climate talks provided all three. That’s enough to justify the claim that the agreement reached this weekend was a breakthrough. Yet, as governments acknowledged, their pact won’t succeed without further effort. Paris is a promising departure. Getting to the right destination is another matter. For
Dec. 15, 2015
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[Peter Singer] Should we honor racists?
In the midst of my Practical Ethics class last month, several students stood up and walked out. They were joining hundreds of others in a protest led by the Black Justice League, one of many student groups that have emerged across the United States in response to the fatal shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, in August 2014, and subsequent police killings of unarmed African Americans. Later that day, members of the BJL occupied the office of Princeton University president Christophe
Dec. 14, 2015
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[Trudy Rubin] Trump will not triumph
People, aren’t we better than this? Have we really become the Republic of Fear?Listening to Donald Trump, you’d certainly think so. His proposal to ban all Muslims from entering the country was only the latest of an endless series of ugly and bigoted tirades meant to stoke fear and anger. Yet adoring thousands still flock to his rallies. The New York Times, after analyzing every public Trump utterance for a week, noted several powerful patterns of speech common to demagogues of the past century.
Dec. 14, 2015