Most Popular
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Korea removes over 1,300 Chinese-made security cameras from barracks
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US says 'only viable path' for peace is 'complete' Korean Peninsula denuclearization
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Former Ador CEO files injuction to remain as director after her current term
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[Today’s K-pop] Stray Kids Hyunjin becomes face of Cartier
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Celltrion secures contract to supply Herzuma to Brazil for 5th year
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W4.24m Chuseok bonuses for lawmakers, but 40% of workers get none
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Busan is most popular destination among foreign tourists
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Highway trash spikes during Chuseok
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Japanese-Korean romances surge to leverage audiences and funds
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[Herald Review] Ryoo Seung-wan asks what justice is in “I, the Executioner”
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[Wang Son-taek] Distorted myth of strong response
On the Korean Peninsula, military tensions have surged to another high. The tensions began to increase on May 10, when North Korean defector groups sent balloons with anti-North Korea leaflets from South Korea to the North. On May 28, the North sent hundreds of balloons filled with garbage, including excrement, and released a statement that mocked the same balloons as freedom of expression from the South and that balloons from the North are in violation of international law. On May 31, South K
ViewpointsJune 14, 2024
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[Robert Fouser] Seoul as a coffee capital
The other day, I was asked what comes to mind when I think of Seoul. I thought for a moment and answered: coffee. Great coffee is everywhere. Judging by the number of cafes, variety of flavors and level of consumption, Seoul has become one of the world’s biggest coffee capitals. How and why did Seoul become a great coffee city? Coffee arrived in Korea with imperialism in the late 19th century. Emperor Gojong loved coffee and often drank it at the Jeonggwanheon in at the palace Deoksugung.
ViewpointsJune 14, 2024
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[Editorial] Doing it right
South Korea’s financial authorities are now expected to ponder the timing of a rate cut in a more cautious way as the US Federal Reserve decided Wednesday (US time) to freeze the benchmark interest rates at between 5.25-5.5 percent for a seventh-straight time. The Fed’s decision came after fresh inflation data issued earlier in the day slightly moderated last month but still above its 2 percent inflation target. The US benchmark rates have been kept unchanged since July last year. Th
EditorialJune 14, 2024
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[Editorial] Prepare for earthquakes
A magnitude 4.8 earthquake struck near Buan, North Jeolla Province, early Wednesday, sending off alerts across the nation and causing minor property damage. Although no injuries were reported, the strong quake highlighted the need for tight, systematic preparations against tremor-related disasters. The temblor struck near the southwestern county at 8:26 a.m. at an estimated depth of 8 kilometers, according to the Korea Meteorological Administration. Firefighter and Interior Ministry officials sa
EditorialJune 13, 2024
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[Mariana Mazzucato, Giovanni Tagliani] Economic shortsightedness is jeopardizing Italy‘s G7 ambitions
On June 13-15, Italy will host the 50th G7 summit in Fasano. Ahead of the meeting, Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s government announced an ambitious Africa-centered development plan and invited the leaders of several African countries and the African Union to attend -- the largest number of representatives from the continent at a G7 summit since 2017. Meloni unveiled her Africa initiative, known as the Mattei Plan, at the Italy-Africa Summit earlier this year. It aims to establish internat
ViewpointsJune 12, 2024
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[Kim Seong-kon] What to do with ‘no kids zones’
“No kids zones” in South Korea have caught the attention of the foreign press lately. In Le Monde, for example, an article appeared with the title: “South Korea’s ‘no kids zones’ flourish in cafes and restaurants.” Some time ago, The Washington Post, too, reported on South Korea’s no kids zones in an article entitled, “Is it discrimination if you can’t bring your kids to a restaurant?” According to the Le Monde article, the low bi
ViewpointsJune 12, 2024
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[Editorial] Negative growth in 2040s
South Korea’s current economic performance is not spectacularly impressive, but it is not so bad in a way that heralds serious trouble -- at least for now. The long-term outlook, however, suggests that something dramatic should be done to avoid a crisis stemming from a shrinking workforce and the dearth of innovative products. The Korea Development Institute said Tuesday in a monthly report that the Korean economy was showing some signs of improvement in the strength of export growth, thou
EditorialJune 12, 2024
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[Career Compass] Craft yourself as a unique talent
With more than 23 years of experience, Dong Hyun (Ryan) Kim, senior director of Asia Pacific Regional Data and Analytics at the Coca-Cola Company, based in Singapore, is recognized as a global expert in his field. I met with him to hear about his career path. Q: You are a global expert in data and analytics. What is data and analytics? A: Simply put, it enables faster and better decision-making, which ultimately leads to better in-market execution. Companies typically have three core business
ViewpointsJune 11, 2024
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[Editorial] Seek ways to defuse tensions
As North Korea continued to send trash-carrying balloons across the border, South Korea resumed the loudspeaker propaganda broadcasts Sunday, signaling escalating tensions on the Korean Peninsula. Although the smelly and noisy campaigns in recent weeks are not deadly clashes, the pace of the tit-for-tat exchanges is fast enough to raise serious security concerns. Despite Seoul’s repeated warnings, Pyongyang keeps sending waste-loaded balloons. South Korea’s military said Monday that
EditorialJune 11, 2024
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[Grace Kao] International fans on the way to 'Music Bank'
One of my favorite activities when I’m in South Korea is to watch the idols arrive at KBS’ “Music Bank” on Friday morning. While “Music Bank” is broadcast Friday evenings, there is a promenade of idols who arrive in the morning in preparation for prerecording and their live performance later in the day. Fans can line up near the entrance and watch them pose for the official photographers before entering the building. This may be the closest they will get to se
ViewpointsJune 11, 2024
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[Yoo Choon-sik] Divide between exports, domestic demand
South Korea’s revised gross domestic product data, released late last week, showed its economy grew at the fastest rate in just over two years during the first quarter of this year. While the overall growth rate matched the earlier official estimates, details from the revised data raise a louder alarm about the magnitude of the slump in domestic demand. The country’s GDP grew by a seasonally adjusted 1.3 percent in the January-March period over the previous quarter, the same as the o
ViewpointsJune 10, 2024
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[Editorial] Doctors’ strike
The Korea Medical Association, South Korea’s largest organization of doctors, said in a press briefing Sunday that it would stage a walkout and a rally on June 18, signaling another clash between doctors and the government over its medical school quota hike. The KMA, which has more than 129,000 members, said that in the survey conducted last week more than 90 percent of the respondents voted to support the “strong protest” against the government’s increase in admission qu
EditorialJune 10, 2024
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[Paolo Cesarini, Christophe Leclercq, Maria Joao Rodrigues] Europe needs a democracy commissioner
When European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen took office in December 2019, she established a “new push for European democracy” as one of her six policy priorities. After the European Parliament elections on June 6-9, one of the biggest threats to democracy still needs to be adequately addressed: the risks confronting Europe’s media sector. To be sure, EU lawmakers have taken important steps that will help safeguard media. The Digital Markets Act, limiting the power o
ViewpointsJune 7, 2024
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[Editorial] Impasse from the start
The National Assembly on Wednesday held its plenary session and elected the speaker to lead the first half of its new term in a unilateral vote, with the lawmakers from the ruling party boycotting the session, the first time this has happened in South Korea’s history. The Assembly controlled by the main opposition Democratic Party of Korea went ahead with the plenary session to elect five-term lawmaker Woo Won-shik as the new speaker and four-term lawmaker Lee Hak-young as the vice speaker
EditorialJune 7, 2024
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[Room Tone] Thoughts on talent compensation
Recently, there has been a surge in discussions about the Korean television industry, focusing particularly on the rising production costs of scripted dramas. A key area drawing media attention is the economics of talent compensation, especially for A-list talent at the very top of every casting list. In order to better understand the economics of talent compensation, let us turn to the Korean film industry. For the past two decades, the Korean film industry has thrived on the success of its dom
ViewpointsJune 6, 2024
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[Winnie Byanyima, Joseph E. Stiglitz] How to protect world from next pandemic
“History teaches us that the next pandemic is a matter of when, not if,” warned World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus earlier this year. He is right. That is why it is vital that the world’s governments successfully conclude their work of negotiating an accord on pandemic prevention, preparedness, and response. Negotiators were not able to meet the latest deadline for an agreement. They need more time, but they must also be mindful that time is r
ViewpointsJune 6, 2024
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[Wang Son-taek] Trash balloons vs. leaflet balloons
North Korea sent over around a thousand balloons filled with trash, including excrement, to South Korea, scattering them across the country. The garbage itself is filthy, but the base nature of North Korea's actions is even more despicable. This incident is also a disgraceful and embarrassing display of the current state of inter-Korean relations. Why did this humiliating situation occur? How should we respond? A lot of angry South Koreans might think the answer should be to accuse North Ko
ViewpointsJune 6, 2024
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[Editorial] Korea-Africa Summit
The Korea-Africa Summit wrapped up its two-day schedule Wednesday, marking a major step forward in strengthening economic and diplomatic cooperation between South Korea and 48 African nations. President Yoon Suk Yeol on Tuesday hosted the main session of the first-ever summit with African delegations at Kintex in Gyeonggi Province, where the leaders adopted a joint declaration aimed at promoting trade and investment as well as collaborating on critical minerals and development projects. Notably,
EditorialJune 6, 2024
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[Editorial] Gas, oil exploration
President Yoon Suk Yeol’s surprise press briefing Monday over the possibility of gas and oil sent energy stocks higher and generated plenty of media buzz about a rosy scenario for a country heavily dependent on imported resources. But there are skeptical views about its feasibility. Yoon said the government has approved a massive project to kick off exploratory drilling in search of gas and oil reserves in the deep sea off the country’s southeastern coast. He said the reserves could
EditorialJune 5, 2024
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[Kim Seong-kon] Remembering John Barth and the Korean 1980s
Recently, the celebrated American author John Barth passed away, leaving behind his long-lasting legacy of postmodern literature. In his monumental essay, “The Literature of Exhaustion” (1967), Barth declared that literary realism and conventional modes of literary representation had used up their possibilities in the postmodern era of electronic media and pop culture. In his 1982 sequel essay “The Literature of Replenishment,” he proposed “postmodernism” as a
ViewpointsJune 4, 2024