Most Popular
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S. Koreans' happiness rising slowly but surely: presidential panel
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No. of depression patients exceeds 1m in 2022
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Seoul subway fare to rise 12% beginning Saturday
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Races tighten in Seoul as parties battle for Assembly control
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Korean Air to submit new merger plan to ease antitrust concerns
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Korea to begin experiment with central bank digital currency
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6-year-old Uzbek girl found dead in Daegu
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US House votes to remove Speaker Kevin McCarthy
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US calls on China to encourage N. Korea's return to diplomacy
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Star lecturers, hagwon probed over buying Suneung questions
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[Jean Guerrero] US top court waging war on youth
The Supreme Court's right-wing majority seems to be declaring war on young people. In recent days alone, the court has halted affirmative action in colleges, derailed student loan debt forgiveness and approved discrimination against LGBTQ+ couples in certain cases. The conservative justices seem hellbent on making the country a more hostile place for Gen Z and millennials, the most diverse voters in terms of race, ethnicity, gender identity and sexual orientation. Many young people see in
ViewpointsJuly 11, 2023
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[Stephen Mihm] How Titanic became a money-making scheme
The ill-fated passengers who died trying to visit the wreck of the Titanic paid an extraordinary price for the privilege: $250,000 each. This is hardly surprising, given how many people view the story of the doomed ship with intense, if morbid, fascination. While it’s tempting to blame James Cameron for this state of affairs, that’s not quite right. Our obsession with the Titanic tragedy, along with monetizing it, has far deeper roots. Even as the corpses of those who died in the tra
ViewpointsJuly 11, 2023
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[Editorial] Flawed telecom policy
The Ministry of Science and ICT on Thursday unveiled a set of plans aimed at lowering mobile subscription fees and increasing competition in the telecom market. One key measure is to allow a fourth carrier to enter the mobile telecom market dominated by three players -- SK Telecom, KT and LG Uplus. With a new player in the fray, the government hopes competition among the carriers will intensify in a way that will lead to more affordable monthly subscription plans. The new plan of the ICT Ministr
EditorialJuly 11, 2023
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[Jean Pisani-Ferry] Can climate investment be financed by debt?
Climate ambitions are running into macroeconomic headwinds in the European Union and the United Kingdom. Speaking in late May, French Minister of the Economy Bruno Le Maire adamantly rejected the idea that France’s transition to a net-zero economy should be financed by issuing more debt. Then, just days later, Rachel Reeves, the UK’s shadow chancellor, backtracked from an earlier campaign pledge to borrow 28 billion euros ($35 billion) per year to finance climate investments. She now
ViewpointsJuly 10, 2023
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[Editorial] Show proof
The Minister of Land, Infrastructure and Transport Won Hee-ryong said Thursday that he would cancel a project to construct an expressway linking Seoul to Yangpyeong, Gyeonggi Province. The capital is surrounded by the province and the county of Yangpyeong, a subdivision of the province, is east of Seoul. Won’s abrupt declaration was a response to the allegations raised by the opposition Democratic Party of Korea that the ministry rerouted the expressway to benefit first lady Kim Keon Hee&r
EditorialJuly 10, 2023
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[Elizabeth Shackelford] Ignoring migrants won‘t fix problems
For five days, “Breaking News” alerts hit my phone repeatedly with updates on the search for a missing submersible. The search for the five-passenger vessel began only days after an overloaded migrant vessel capsized carrying some 750 desperate people bound for Greece. The migrants aboard came from Pakistan, Egypt, Syria and Palestine, all funneled through Libya in a desperate attempt to reach Europe. Only 104 survivors have been found, making it one of the deadliest sinkings ever in
ViewpointsJuly 7, 2023
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[Editorial] Relieve anxiety
The government said Wednesday that it respects the outcome of the International Atomic Energy Agency's safety review of the Japanese government's plans to discharge contaminated wastewater from its wrecked Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant into the sea. A day earlier, the IAEA unveiled its final report that Japan's Fukushima wastewater release plan is consistent with its international safety standards. The release cannot be welcome but the reality is that it is difficult for the gover
EditorialJuly 7, 2023
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[Antara Haldar] Supreme Court kicks away ladder
Fifteen years ago, I watched in rapt attention as a resplendent, yet surreal, scene unfolded: the election of the first-ever African-American US president, Barack Obama. In the past week, the US Supreme Court, in a landmark 6-3 ruling, struck down what may have been one of the key factors in making that story possible: affirmative action in higher education. In an opinion drafted by Chief Justice John Roberts, the Court rejected race-conscious admissions policies at Harvard (Obama’s law sc
ViewpointsJuly 6, 2023
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[Lee Kyong-hee] From brittle armistice to permanent peace
Seven decades after an armistice halted massive death and destruction throughout the Korean Peninsula, the South and North remain technically at war. With leaders of both sides ramping up belligerent rhetoric, a formal peace agreement is as elusive as it was in 1953. Talking about peace right now seems naive, or for some even like leftist pro-North propaganda. Unification looks even farther off. The older generation still misses family members and friends who ended up on the opposite side in the
ViewpointsJuly 6, 2023
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[Editorial] Belt-tightening needed
“Even if we lose the elections, we must push for fiscal soundness,” said President Yoon Suk Yeol while presiding over a national financial strategy meeting with government and ruling party officials on June 28. “The amount of budget cut should be used as a yardstick to assess how innovative ministries are.” Yoon’s remarks can be interpreted as a sign that he is fully committed to tightening the country’s fiscal belt, even though trimming and pruning some nones
EditorialJuly 6, 2023
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[Doyle McManus] Don’t count Putin out -- not yet
A little more than a week ago, Russian President Vladimir Putin’s hold on power appeared to be disintegrating. Rebel mercenaries were advancing on Moscow against little or no resistance. Wealthy Muscovites scrambled for tickets out of the country. A coup d’etat attempt seemed imminent. And then, a perplexing reversal. After denouncing the mutiny as “treason,” Putin agreed to allow its leader, Yevgeny Prigozhin, to take exile in neighboring Belarus. Prigozhin, presumably r
ViewpointsJuly 5, 2023
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[Kim Seong-kon] Moderation: The PC and 'woke' campaigns
Since the late 1980s, the term “political correctness,” abbreviated PC, has been widely used by American liberals and radicals. “PC” was a term that described language or behavior that was meant to avoid offense to the socially marginalized. In the 1990s, therefore, one would frequently hear, “Is it politically correct?” or “Is he politically correct?” At that time, you should be very careful not to say or do anything “politically incorrect.&
ViewpointsJuly 5, 2023
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[Editorial] Political strike
The Korean Confederation of Trade Unions launched a two-week general strike on Monday, demanding the resignation of President Yoon Suk Yeol. It is feared the general strike will dampen any signs of a recovery in exports, which prop up South Korea’s economy. The country posted a trade surplus of $1.13 billion last month, ending a 15-month streak of trade deficit. The confederation threatened to mobilize more than 400,000 of its 1.2 million members to strike, which will rotate among its affi
EditorialJuly 5, 2023
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[Robin Abcarian] Supreme Court justices need high ethical standards
Why do some United States Supreme Court justices have such a hard time saying no? Believe me, I understand the temptation. Columnists may not be judges in the traditional sense, but we are judges in the court of public opinion. Occasionally, I've been offered gifts in exchange for a positive ruling (well, a positive column) on a controversial issue that may come before me. Attractive as these offers may be, they are just not that difficult to refuse. Especially when the institution's c
ViewpointsJuly 4, 2023
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[Editorial] ‘Ghost children’
The National Assembly finally passed the much-delayed bill that requires medical institutions to report new births to the government Friday. As with other hastily arranged legislation, South Korean lawmakers acted only after the nation witnessed shocking events that prompted public outcry. This time, the trigger came from long-concealed crimes against unregistered babies, two of whom were found dead in a refrigerator -- a striking example of fatal loopholes in the nation’s baby registratio
EditorialJuly 4, 2023
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[Martin Schram] Enact re-affirmative action now
On Wednesday in the nation’s capital, officials at all levels were busily working on official papers that would have a lot to do with Jaylin Osborne’s hopes and dreams for a bright future in college and beyond. Jaylin, after all, was the sort of slim 15-year-old who was known not only for looking good in dreadlocks but also for helping his eighth-grade classmates. He had every reason to dream big. “Bright student … a hard-working, curious scholar … a leader among
ViewpointsJuly 4, 2023
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[Takatoshi Ito] Japan’s will to up its defense budget
Following Japan’s defeat in World War II, the United States took pains to ensure that Japanese militarism could never again pose a threat to the Asia-Pacific or the world. As in Germany, these efforts were profoundly successful. For almost eight decades, Japan has eschewed foreign adventures and violent conflict. Pacifism was not only enshrined in its constitution; it also became deeply rooted in its political culture. By relying on America and its network of alliances and global partnersh
ViewpointsJuly 3, 2023
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[Andrew Sheng] The future monetary system is already here
ChatGPT is touted as the tech breakthrough that may revolutionize daily operations, raising productivity and ushering the world into a new era. However, a series of technological innovations, beginning with FinTech or the digitization of financial services, including blockchain and the arrival of cyber-currencies, is gradually but surely transforming the financial landscape. As central bankers grapple with the complexity of digital money, they have come to realize that a new monetary system is a
ViewpointsJuly 3, 2023
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[Editorial] Take precautions
China's revised anti-espionage law came into effect on Saturday. Its scope of espionage activities was broadened. Beijing became more powerful than ever to punish what it deems threats to national security. The problem is that the concept of espionage has become ambiguous. Reportedly under the law, "relying on espionage organizations and their agents" as well as the unauthorized obtaining of "documents, data, materials and items related to national security and interests"
EditorialJuly 3, 2023
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[Robert J. Fouser] Shifting from university entrance to exit
A recent controversy over the difficulty of the Suneung, the nationwide college scholastic ability test, has raised concerns about the effects of the exam. Difficult “killer questions” that require skills and knowledge that go beyond the high school curriculum intimidate students and force them to turn to private cram schools for extra exam preparation. The burden on families for the cost of private education is a longstanding issue that previous presidential administrations have tri
ViewpointsJune 30, 2023