Articles by Nam Kyung-don
Nam Kyung-don
don@heraldcorp.com-
[Graphic News] Majority of Americans hold Trump culpable for 1/6 riot: study
About 6 in 10 Americans believe Trump should be charged for the Jan. 6, 2021 riot in the US Capitol, a poll published by ABC News and Ipsos revealed. Opinions differed greatly based on the political party respondents supported. Nevertheless, 58 percent of the total respondents replied that they believe Trump should be legally charged for the riots. Sixty percent of the total respondents replied they believe the hearings held by the House 1/6 committee was “fair and unbias
World June 27, 2022
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[Interactive] Crypto scam victims lose more than $1b since 2021
More than 46,000 people reported losing a total of over $1 billion in cryptocurrency scams since the start of 2021, the US Federal Trade Commission said in a report. Nearly half the people who reported losing digital currencies in a scam said it started with an ad, post or a message on a social media platform, according to the FTC. The craze for cryptocurrencies was at a fever pitch last year, with bitcoin hitting a record high of $69,000 in November. Reports point to social media and cr
World June 25, 2022
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[Graphic News] S. Korea ranks No. 1 in household debt-to-GDP ratio in Q1
South Korea had the highest household debt-to-gross domestic product ratio among 36 major economies in the first quarter, a global finance report said. The country’s household debt-to-GDP ratio came to 104.3 percent in the January-March period, followed by Lebanon with 97.8 percent, Hong Kong with 95.3 percent, Thailand with 89.7 percent and Britain with 83.9 percent, according to data from the Institute of International Finance. South Korea was the only country whose household
World Business June 24, 2022
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[Graphic News] Samsung Electronics world No. 22 by market cap
Samsung Electronics, South Korea’s leading tech firm, was the world‘s 22nd-largest company in terms of market capitalization, down seven notches from a year earlier, data showed. According to the list of the global top 100 companies released by London-based accounting company PwC, the tech giant was the only South Korean company on the list with the market value of $342 billion as of March. The share price of the chip giant has fallen amid global uncertainties, including moneta
World Business June 23, 2022
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[Graphic News] Global nuclear arsenal to grow for first time since Cold War
The global nuclear arsenal is expected to grow in the coming years for the first time since the Cold War while the risk of such weapons being used is the greatest in decades, a leading conflict and armaments think-tank said. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and Western support for Kyiv has heightened tensions among the world’s nine nuclear-armed states, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute think-tank said in a new set of research. Russia has the world’s bigges
World June 22, 2022
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[Graphic News] Hong Kong most expensive city to live in for expats
Hong Kong is the world’s most expensive city to live in as an expat for the second year in a row, according to a new study. New York and Geneva took second and third place in the rankings. Higher prices and a stronger currency over the past year kept the Asian city at the top of the tree, according to ECA International, which carried out its research in March this year. London and Tokyo round out the top five. Seoul, capital city of South Korea, stays 10th most expensive location in
World June 21, 2022
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[Interactive] Number of executives at major firms rises 4.5% in Q1
The number of executives at South Korea’s major firms expanded 4.5 percent on-year in the first quarter of the year despite the coronavirus pandemic, a corporate tracker said. A total of 353 leading companies in Asia’s fourth-largest economy had a combined 14,418 executives as of end-March this year, up from 13,803 a year earlier, according to the Leaders Index. The figure covers companies out of the country’s top 500 corporations by sales that have disclosed their first-
Business June 18, 2022
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[Graphic News] Global tourist arrivals tripled in first quarter
International tourist arrivals tripled in the first quarter compared with the same period in 2021, with Europe leading the rebound as COVID-19 restrictions were eased, the United Nations’ tourism agency said. In the first three months of 2022, there were 117 million global tourist arrivals, up from 41 million in the same period a year earlier, with the figures showing an increase of 182 percent, the Madrid-based UN World Tourism Organization said. Although the figure remained 6
World June 17, 2022
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[Graphic News] Crypto scam victims lose more than $1b since 2021
More than 46,000 people reported losing a total of over $1 billion in cryptocurrency scams since the start of 2021, the US Federal Trade Commission said in a report. Nearly half the people who reported losing digital currencies in a scam said it started with an ad, post or a message on a social media platform, according to the FTC. The craze for cryptocurrencies was at a fever pitch last year, with bitcoin hitting a record high of $69,000 in November. Reports point to social media and cr
World June 16, 2022
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[Graphic News] Trade of computers, peripherals hits new high
South Korea’s trade of computers and related goods soared nearly 40 percent to reach a new all-time high in the first four months of the year amid the coronavirus pandemic, data showed. The country’s exports and imports of computers and peripherals stood at $13.3 billion in the January-April period, up 40.2 percent from a year earlier, according to the data from the Korea Customs Service. Computers and peripherals include desktops, notebooks, tablets, solid state drives, memory
Business June 15, 2022
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[Graphic News] Population mobility hits 48-year low
The number of South Koreans who moved to different residences in the country sank to a 48-year low in April due to an aging population and fewer housing transactions, data showed. The number of people who changed their residences came to 483,000 last month, down 18.7 percent from a year earlier, according to the data compiled by Statistics Korea. The tally marked the lowest for any April since 1974, when the figure marked 480,000. It was also the first time that the number had fallen below
National June 13, 2022
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[Interactive] Number of new child adoptees in S. Korea drops in 2021
The number of newly adopted South Korean children fell for the third consecutive year in 2021 amid the pandemic, government data showed. According to the Ministry of Health and Welfare, the number of new child adoptees reached 415 last year, down from 704 in 2019 and 492 in 2020. Officials attributed the decrease in adoption to the effects of COVID-19. Among the new adoptees, 189, or 45.5 percent, were adopted by overseas families. Of those, 66.7 percent were sent to the United States. Oth
National June 11, 2022
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[Graphic News] Movie theater attendance nears pre-pandemic level in May: data
South Korean film attendance numbers nearly shot back up to the pre-pandemic level in May, data showed, with a couple of big hits leading the charge. According to the Korean Film Council, movies screened in the country amassed a combined 14.55 million admissions in May, the highest monthly figure since 16.84 million from January 2020 - the last full month before the COVID-19 pandemic hit. The May figure was also a massive jump from just 3.21 million admissions in April. During the pandem
National June 10, 2022
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[Graphic News] Number of executives at major firms rises 4.5% in Q1
The number of executives at South Korea’s major firms expanded 4.5 percent on-year in the first quarter of the year despite the coronavirus pandemic, a corporate tracker said. A total of 353 leading companies in Asia’s fourth-largest economy had a combined 14,418 executives as of end-March this year, up from 13,803 a year earlier, according to the Leaders Index. The figure covers companies out of the country’s top 500 corporations by sales that have disclosed their first-
National June 9, 2022
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[Graphic News] US births rise for the first time in seven years in 2021
The number of births in the United States grew 1 percent in 2021 from a pandemic-related low in 2020, marking the first increase since 2014, according to a report by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The report said that 3,659,289 babies were born last year, with the increase driven by women between 25 and 49 years. Women aged 35 to 39 accounted for the biggest rise, while the birth rate among teenagers hit a record low. Americans had the lowest number of babies in more th
World June 8, 2022
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