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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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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Seoul city opens emergency care centers
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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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[Kim Seong-kon] Things we often misunderstand
When foreign cultures come to Korea, they seem to change to suit the Korean sentiment and the new environment. For example, TGI Fridays is just an ordinary family restaurant in the States. In Korea, however, it is a rather decent, expensive Western restaurant where you can bring valued guests without hesitation. Another example is hotels. Unlike in the States, Holiday Inn is a four-star hotel in Korea and the Marriot Hotel a five-star super luxury hotel. In the States, Chinese restaurants are kn
April 19, 2016
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[Luiz Felipe d’Avila] How to save Brazil
SAO PAULO -- Brazil’s political crisis appears to be coming to a head. Now that the lower house of the National Congress has voted in favor of President Dilma Rousseff’s impeachment for violating fiscal rules, the Senate’s 81 members will vote in the coming days on whether to try her. If 42 agree, she will be suspended for up to 180 days, during which time Vice President Michel Temer will assume the presidency. If the Senate does not produce a two-thirds vote for conviction during that period, R
April 19, 2016
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[Mohamed A. El-Erian] G20 delivers empty warning on global economy
The communique issued by the Group of 20 finance ministers and central bankers at the conclusion of talks in Washington this weekend had a somewhat unreal, and worryingly ironic, tone. Noting that global growth “remains modest and uneven,” the G20 warned the large advanced economies against continuing their prolonged, excessive reliance on unconventional monetary policy to power growth. Yet the communique, which was issued in the names of the specialized policy makers most closely involved in pe
April 19, 2016
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[Lee Jae-min] What happened in 1362 and 2012
Two ancient Buddhist statues were stolen by a group of Korean smugglers from two Japanese temples on Tsushima Island in October 2012. The statues were later found in Korea and confiscated by law enforcement agencies. Japan has been asking for the return of the statues. This issue has remained an outstanding item in bilateral relations.There is an international treaty to which both countries are parties, the 1972 UNESCO Convention, which obligates return of stolen cultural artifacts. Japan has be
April 19, 2016
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[Helle Thorning-Schmidt] Children in drought-hit Ethiopia need assistance
Six million children in Ethiopia are hungry and without clean water. It is in all of our interests to help Ethiopia overcome the worst drought in 50 years. When 4-year-old Malou first arrived at the Save the Children stabilization center in the small community of Fedeto, she was severely underweight and limp, her feet swollen. But having been treated for the effects of malnutrition, and it seemed starting on the road to recovery, she now has a second battle on her hands -- to overcome pneumoni
April 18, 2016
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[Matthew Shapiro] Dust in the wind, solutions in the lab
Spring is coming, but people living in Northeast Asia are encountering blooming respiratory illnesses as well as the cherry blossoms. Trade winds carry the fine yellow dust of the Mongolian deserts eastward to China, the Korean Peninsula, Japan and, in much smaller amounts, the West Coast of the United States. It is an event that is particularly severe in the March-April months, accompanied by images of Asians wearing surgical masks, scarves and even respirators while going about their daily act
April 18, 2016
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[Bernard-Henri Levy] Taking of moderates’ side in the war within Islam
French Prime Minister Manuel Valls was right when he recently said that there is no good excuse for jihadism. Rejecting the culture of excuses, he said, also meant resisting the temptation to dwell on explanations of the jihadist impulse.And Valls was right again on April 4 when he warned against the danger of an ideological victory for Salafism, the doctrine underlying jihadism, which views Europe --and, within Europe, France -- as prime ground for proselytization.Successive French governments,
April 18, 2016
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The crawling pace of doctor-payment reform
Paying doctors a fee for each service they provide gives them incentive to offer the maximum number of treatments, as well as pay less attention to how well patients recover. This is why the Barack Obama administration -- and just about everyone else -- wants to change the way doctors get paid.But as the administration’s latest step away from the fee-for-service model illustrates, it’s doing too little, too slowly to accomplish the change that’s needed.On Monday, the Centers for Medicare and Med
April 18, 2016
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[Ana Palacio] Creating citizens of European Union
Last month was another cruel one for Europe, culminating in the horrific terrorist attacks in Brussels on March 22. The aftermath has seen a new round of soul searching, with Europeans mulling over the European Union’s institutional failures and sheer incompetence, not to mention the existential challenge it currently faces.Such considerations seem to arise frequently these days, as Europe encounters a seemingly endless series of emergencies, from the Greek crisis to the influx of refugees. Yet
April 18, 2016
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[Lewis W. Diuguid] Sprint, Verizon struggle to overcome public relations stumbles
Social media continues to teach its users that in this increasingly diverse, multicultural, multiethnic nation, people should deliberate long and hard -- and even get a second and third opinion -- before they say or post anything.For corporations, the senseless use of social media in the rush to one-up competitors could result in the loss of customers and a lot of too-real dollars and cents.Sprint Corp. CEO Marcelo Claure has made himself an object lesson for others after he posted a clip on Twi
April 17, 2016
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[Joseph E. Stiglitz] What’s wrong with negative rates?
I wrote at the beginning of January that economic conditions this year were set to be as weak as in 2015, which was the worst year since the global financial crisis erupted in 2008. And, as has happened repeatedly over the last decade, a few months into the year, others’ more optimistic forecasts are being revised downward.The underlying problem — which has plagued the global economy since the crisis, but has worsened slightly — is lack of global aggregate demand. Now, in response, the European
April 17, 2016
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[Jonathan Bernstein] How a ‘Plan C’ candidate can win the Republican crown
After House Speaker Paul Ryan said Tuesday that he would not seek the presidency in 2016 under any circumstances, Scott Lemieux at Lawyers, Guns and Money issued a challenge to those who think someone besides Donald Trump or Ted Cruz could be the Republicans’ nominee: Anybody who thinks this is a plausible scenario really needs to explain specifically how this is going to work.I think it is plausible and I can explain why. It’s a good excuse to run through the remaining possibilities on the Repu
April 17, 2016
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[Jeffrey J. Selingo] Beyond the 4-year degree
The assumption that a college education should take four years is baked into American culture. Colleges in the colonial days were founded on the premise of a four-year degree, a concept imported from Europe. Harvard University experimented with a three-year degree when it was founded in 1636, but the test was short-lived, and the four-year degree has been the standard ever since. We expect students to enter college at 18 and leave when they turn 22, and we worry about those who take a more circu
April 17, 2016
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[David Ignatius] Advice from foreign policy veteran
Bob Gates has unusual standing in the debate about the Obama administration’s foreign policy: He was defense secretary both for a hawkish President George W. Bush and then a wary President Obama. He understood Bush’s desire to project power and Obama’s skepticism. Gates characteristically finds a middle ground in the argument that has been swirling since Jeffrey Goldberg’s Atlantic magazine article examining Obama’s reluctance to use military force in Syria and the broader Middle East. Borrowing
April 17, 2016
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[Suthichai Yoon] Civil power antidote to income gap
Can growing wealth concentration — which has become a global threat to peace — be halted? This was the question posed by Muhammad Yunus, Bangladesh’s Nobel Peace Prize-winning pioneer of microcredit and microfinance, at 25th-anniversary celebrations for the Daily Star newspaper in Dhaka recently. Not content with merely raising such a crucial query, Yunus ventured an answer for the audience of several thousand. Oxfam, he noted, had just delivered a horrifying update on wealth concentration. “Th
April 15, 2016
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[Rachel Marsden] Russia, U.S. should unite versus Saudi-China
If the Central Intelligence Agency’s role is to discreetly promote the economic and political interests of the United States, then there’s one country that ought to be awfully disappointing to the agency right now: Saudi Arabia. In fact, if there’s an issue on which America and Russia could potentially agree, it would be the damage Saudi Arabia has recently wrought upon the national and economic security of both nations. Take Syria, for example. The CIA operation to train Syrian rebels goes by t
April 15, 2016
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[Chon Shi-yong] From the queen to the spoiler
President Park Geun-hye used to be called the “queen of elections,” having led her conservative party to victory in most crucial elections since 2004. Things like her personal charm, older generations’ fond memories of her father and mother and southeasterners’ favoritism combined to earn her the nickname. Wednesday’s general election deprived her of the title overnight. The queen turned out to be the biggest spoiler of the ruling party’s campaigns. Voters hand out verdicts every election, and t
April 14, 2016
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G7 commits to total abolition of nuclear arms
It is highly significant that the Group of Seven major powers — including the three nuclear powers of the United States, Britain and France — issued a clear message to pursue the eradication of nuclear weapons, doing so from a city flattened by the atomic bomb.The G7 adopted the Hiroshima Declaration on Nuclear Disarmament and Non-Proliferation at its foreign ministers’ meeting in Hiroshima.“The people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki experienced immense devastation and human suffering,” the declaratio
April 14, 2016
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Hong Kong’s youth power
Hong Kong is an indisputable part of China, so think the Chinese. A new political party has been launched by young students who orchestrated the 2014 pro-democracy protests against mainland China. The new political party intends to campaign for a fresh referendum that will decide Hong Kong’s future and also its possible independence from the mainland. Hong Kong enjoys many freedoms, civic and political that are unheard of and unimaginable in the mainland. Chinese authorities viewed the earlier s
April 14, 2016
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[Raul Palabrica] China’s struggle for recognition
What would you do if you were the richest person in your community and you had issues with your neighbors on property rights? If you were emotionally stable or did not have a chip on your shoulder, you would reach out to them to come up with a win-win solution to your conflict. If you were emotionally challenged or harbored feelings of insecurity, you would perform acts that show your superiority or your neighbors’ weakness in relation to your strength. Like a bully, you may even use force or in
April 14, 2016