Articles by Yu Kun-ha
Yu Kun-ha
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Ten ways for Obama to remake the world
We could be nearing a golden hour in U.S. foreign policy, that rare moment when a newly reelected president theoretically has the experience and clout to make good things happen. As President Barack Obama told Russian President Dmitry Medvedev last March before an unanticipated open microphone, “This is my last election. After my election I have more flexibility.” We can think of many places more deserving of presidential flexibility than Russia, which is in such a state of pugnacious isolationi
Viewpoints Jan. 2, 2013
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The great bank debate
OXFORD ― Christine Lagarde, the International Monetary Fund’s managing director, recently said of the unfinished agenda for global financial-sector reform: “To start, we need concrete progress with the too-important-to-fail conundrum. We need a global-level discussion of the pros and cons of direct restrictions on business models.” Five years on from the start of the crisis, with the publication of the Liikanen report on European Union banking reform, that debate has finally begun.The Liikanen p
Viewpoints Jan. 2, 2013
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[Naomi Wolf] Putting an end to India’s deep-rooted rape culture
NEW YORK ― The crime seems incomprehensible. A 23-year-old physiotherapy student is dead, 12 days after having been raped for more than an hour by six men in a bus traveling on main roads in the Indian capital. Her internal injuries from the iron rod that her attackers used were so severe that doctors had to remove her intestines in their effort to save her life.Indians, it seems, have had enough. Dozens of large and increasingly angry demonstrations have been held to demand that the government
Viewpoints Jan. 2, 2013
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[Editorial] Secretive appointments
President-elect Park Geun-hye is grappling with a task that has been blown out of proportion in terms of importance ― appointing members of the presidential transition team. By now she should have started to receive briefings from members of the transition committee on the conduct of the affairs of the central government. Yet she is still not ready to unveil the full lineup. On New Year’s Eve, Kim Yong-joon, the former Constitutional Court chief who was named to lead the transition team, said hi
Editorial Jan. 1, 2013
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[Editorial] Tax bombs on the way
Lawmakers have begun to drop tax bombs to bankroll the welfare pledges of President-elect Park Geun-hye. They passed the budget bill for 2013 early Tuesday morning together with a set of measures aimed at increasing tax revenue.This year’s budget was finally set at 342 trillion won, down 500 billion won from the administration’s original proposal submitted last September. Nevertheless, legislators approved bills that would increase the tax burden on rich people as shortfalls are expected in tax
Editorial Jan. 1, 2013
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Twitter saps productivity, Facebook makes you fat
Ever since the invention of the wheel in Mesopotamia around 3500 B.C., technological innovation has been improving our lives. Because new devices and processes help us produce more (output) with less (labor input), prices fall, real wages rise and we are all better off. If there is a free lunch in this world, it’s productivity growth. There is even an economic school of thought, known as real business cycle theory, which views technology shocks as the main driver of the business cycle: not the c
Viewpoints Jan. 1, 2013
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View China as a partner, not a problem
In a few weeks, President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden will be reinaugurated with great fanfare in Washington. Soon after that, in Beijing, Xi Jinping and Li Keqiang will ascend to the presidency and premiership of China. (China’s premier is the second-highest office but unlike the American vice president is more like the country’s chief operating officer, with the president as chief executive officer.) If our political leaders would play their cards right, the concomitant inaugurat
Viewpoints Dec. 30, 2012
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The billionaires’ long game
I keep hearing that the billionaires and big corporations that poured all that money into the 2012 election learned their lesson. They lost their shirts and won’t do it again. So we don’t need campaign finance reform.Baloney.It’s true their political investments didn’t exactly pay off this time around.Republican operative Karl Rove’s two giant political funds ― American Crossroads (a super PAC) and Crossroads Grassroots Policy Strategies (a so-called nonprofit “social welfare organization” that
Viewpoints Dec. 30, 2012
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New paradigm sought for changing chaebol
The Blue House will have a new tenant in February. President-elect Park Geun-hye, a conservative, won last month’s election against her liberal rival, Moon Jae-in. The close election proved that Koreans are politically divided, but united in their expectations as both candidates touted pretty much the same social and economic policies, but with differing emphasis and perspectives.One unifying theme of the campaign was the take on the future of chaebol, Korea’s family-owned conglomerates that con
Viewpoints Dec. 30, 2012
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Fed realigns mandate on inflation, employment
NEWPORT BEACH ― In a four-day period in mid-December, three seemingly unrelated developments suggested that modern central banking is in the midst of an historic change. The implications go well beyond academia and policy circles. To the extent that this shift gains momentum ― which appears likely ― it will affect economic performance, the functioning of markets, and asset-price valuations.The three developments began on Dec. 12 in the United States, where the Federal Reserve, led by Ben Bernank
Viewpoints Dec. 30, 2012
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Brave men and women who face up to danger
I want to pay tribute to a few brave men and women who fought in 2012 for dignity, justice, and peace in some of the world’s most troubled countries.My list is limited by space considerations. So I’ve chosen to focus on people I’ve been privileged to meet or whom I’ve learned about from contacts in their countries. What distinguishes them is that each has chosen to struggle, at great risk, for values that most of us take for granted ― though their odds of success are small.I’ll start with someon
Viewpoints Dec. 30, 2012
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[J. Bradford DeLong] U.S. set to jump off fiscal cliff
BERKELEY ― Unless something unexpected happens, the United States’ many legislated reductions in taxes over the past 12 years ― all of which have been explicitly temporary ― will expire simultaneously at the start of 2013. American tax rates will revert overnight to their Clinton-era levels.Some of these reductions were implemented to fight what was seen four years ago as a temporary downturn. Although their supporters wanted to make them permanent, claiming that they were temporary allowed for
Viewpoints Dec. 28, 2012
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Better nuclear bombs for a safer world
Is the U.S. getting ready to wage the Cold War again? If one believes the critics, that’s the aim behind a planned $10 billion modernization of the B61 nuclear bomb, the backbone of the Pentagon’s tactical nuclear arsenal. Actually, there are some other reasons for the upgrade: to reinforce global deterrence, to provide options against a range of future threats, and to make the U.S. stronger and safer. Achieving those goals is worth the money. As wonderful as the idea of a world without nuclear
Viewpoints Dec. 28, 2012
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NRA ‘solutions’ straight out of a Stallone movie
After a tragedy like the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre in Newtown, Conn., the injection of anything short of seriousness into the subsequent public discourse about guns is touchy. But last week, the National Rifle Association blasted numerous rounds into that particular barrier with NRA Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre’s mouth.The organization’s hysteric solution to gun violence in America is to put designated sitting ducks ― er, “armed police officers” ― in every American school.
Viewpoints Dec. 27, 2012
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[Editorial] Health care free riders
The problem of affluent self-employed people free riding on the national health insurance system is well known. To avoid paying contributions commensurate with their large personal wealth, these people manage to put their names on company payrolls and register themselves as employees, whose contributions are computed solely based on their monthly wages.To curb these practices, the National Health Insurance Corp. has begun to levy extra contributions on employees with income other than their mont
Editorial Dec. 26, 2012
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