Articles by Yu Kun-ha
Yu Kun-ha
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Japan needs efforts, money to stop population decline
Japan has finally entered a period in which the population is decreasing substantially each year.How can the nation deal with this unprecedented situation and maintain social vitality? We need to realize Japan has entered a critical stage.The Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry has released the nation’s vital demographic statistics for 2011. The number of babies born last year hit a postwar low of about 1.05 million, while the number of deaths was about 1.25 million.It was the first time since th
Viewpoints June 13, 2012
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The lesson of Wisconsin: OK for Obama, terrible for unions
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker’s victory in Tuesday’s recall election doesn’t mean President Barack Obama is going to lose his reelection bid ― or even that he will lose Wisconsin. But it clearly shows that organized labor is a seriously weakened political force that needs to reinvent itself for its sake and for the nation’s.The vote was widely billed as a preliminary skirmish in the November election between Obama and Republican Mitt Romney, but there is good reason to conclude that its predictive
Viewpoints June 13, 2012
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Greece’s euro exit won’t look anything like 2008
Seoul may be the most poignant place one could pick in Asia for a spectator seat at Greece’s economic implosion. South Korea’s crash in 1997 turned a regional financial crisis into a global one, as a Greek exit from the euro is sure to do. The difference might be that South Korea came back strong, while it’s hard to see how Greece could do the same. There’s another difference: What is happening in Europe has the potential to be far more disruptive to Asia than its own crisis was for the rest of
Viewpoints June 12, 2012
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[Lee Jae-min] Final ending of Lone Star story
“A good ending makes everything good as well,” or so goes an old saying in Hebrew. The raucous relationship between the Korean government and Lone Star, a Texas-based private equity fund, perhaps shows the converse is also true: A bad ending makes everything ugly. With the PEF’s delivery of a “notice of intent” to the Korean government under the Korea-Belgium Investment Promotion Treaty on May 22, the relationship is now heading to a point of no return. Perhaps it has already crossed it. In the
Viewpoints June 12, 2012
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English lessons for needy neighbors
What a pity that Koreans’ English language fluency is now effectively segregated by family income. I have been involved with ESL/EFL education for years, but rarely have I had the privilege of working with a young person of limited means. There are many thousands of English-speaking educators in Korea. I have no doubt that many would trade English lessons for Korean-language immersion or even a simple home meal. While some private tutors charge hefty fees, there are just as many English teachers
Viewpoints June 12, 2012
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Is American economy healing fast enough?
NEWPORT BEACH ― Six internal factors suggest that the United States’ economy is slowly healing. For some observers, these factors were deemed sufficient to form the critical mass needed to propel the economy into escape velocity.While I hoped that they might be proven right, the recent stream of weak economic data, including May’s timid net job creation of only 69,000, confirmed my doubts. With this and other elements of a disheartening employment report now suddenly raising widespread worries a
Viewpoints June 12, 2012
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Acquitting Egypt oppressors a major judiciary mistake
CAIRO ― “Bashar should abandon power and retire safely in Egypt. The general-prosecutor is murder-friendly,” a friend, referring to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, told me as we watched former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak’s trial in the Police Academy’s criminal court. Although Mubarak and his interior (security) minister, Habib al-Adly, were handed life sentences at the conclusion of their trials, the generals who ran Egypt’s apparatus of repression as deputy interior ministers were acqui
Viewpoints June 12, 2012
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[Editorial] Tasks for DUP leader
Former Prime Minister Lee Hae-chan has been elected the new chairman of the main opposition Democratic United Party. The six-term lawmaker won a dramatic come-from-behind victory over Rep. Kim Han-gil on Saturday, the final day of the party’s leadership race that began on May 20.The new leader’s primary task is to manage the selection of a party candidate for the presidential election in December. The job sounds simple but is in fact complex because the party, after nominating its own presidenti
Editorial June 11, 2012
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[Editorial] Bracing for the worst
Spain has at last decided to request European financing to recapitalize its teetering banks, becoming the fourth eurozone country to receive an EU bailout, following Greece, Ireland and Portugal.Madrid’s request for a financial rescue is welcome news for the global economy, as it would calm market jitters over Spanish banks, which are swamped with bad debts resulting from their reckless lending to property developers.The specific amount of aid has not yet been set, as an assessment of the capita
Editorial June 11, 2012
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[Joseph E. Stiglitz] Counting the cost of inequality
NEW YORK ― America likes to think of itself as a land of opportunity, and others view it in much the same light. But, while we can all think of examples of Americans who rose to the top on their own, what really matters are the statistics: to what extent do an individual’s life chances depend on the income and education of his or her parents?Nowadays, these numbers show that the American dream is a myth. There is less equality of opportunity in the United States today than there is in Europe ― o
Viewpoints June 11, 2012
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Which should come first ― your sanity or your job?
Last year it hit the newspapers that Korea had one of the highest suicide rates in the world. Experts scrambled to explain this phenomenon, but perhaps one of the foremost contributing factors to this statistic is that in Korea people tend to not seek or even shun therapy when dealing with distress. The reason for this is that employers can view your mental history in the interview process. Basically, you have two choices: seek help or remain employable. No one should have to make this choice, b
Viewpoints June 11, 2012
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A Canadian’s take on MBC program on foreigners
“The highest result of education is tolerance.” (Helen Keller)I’m a permanent resident residing in Busan, South Korea.I came to South Korea in 1996 to take advantage of Korean people, especially women, and to generally be a bad influence upon Korean culture.My Korean wife is a victim of my trickery and my children are the result of our relationship. Wait a second, wrong story. I’m just waking up from my MBC-induced bad dream. If you watched “The Shocking Truth About Relationships with Foreigners
Viewpoints June 11, 2012
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The United States is already at war in Syria
What happens when a brutal regime gets replaced by an alternative and largely unknown entity? Exhibit A: Libya.Shortly after Moammar Gadhafi bumped his head on a bullet, the “rebels” took over and promptly declared Sharia law. It’s a start ― I guess. Though a start of what, no one’s really quite sure. This week, a new set of Libyan “rebels” has emerged to replace the old ones, seizing control of Tripoli airport and diverting flights. It’s just like the game Whack-a-Mole: Knock one down, and five
Viewpoints June 10, 2012
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[Richard Weitz] Bringing stablility to Central Asia
WASHINGTON ― Recent violence in Kazakhstan and Tajikistan, following civil strife in Kyrgyzstan in 2010, has intensified international concern about Central Asia’s security as the region becomes increasingly important for delivering NATO supplies to the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan.Central Asian countries allow NATO members and partners to transport supplies through their territory to support military forces in Afghanistan ― an essential complement to the flow of
Viewpoints June 10, 2012
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The root causes behind the racism in MBC’s report
The word culture is defined by the Merriam Webster Medical Dictionary as the integrated pattern of human behavior that includes thought, speech, action, and artifacts and depends upon the human capacity for learning and transmitting knowledge to succeeding generations. I chose the above definition because a disease exists and we ought look for the cure. The main symptoms are obvious: racism, xenophobia, and ignorance. However, I don’t wish to simply eliminate the symptoms. I want to play doctor
Viewpoints June 10, 2012
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