Articles by Lee Hyun-joo
Lee Hyun-joo
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[Ronald Eberhard] E-commerce and TPP
Amazon, Lazada, Grab, Uber and the Trans-Pacific Partnership share a common interest in Indonesia. All favor openness and competition in the field of e-commerce. The intention to open up the economy is surely to attract more investment in e-commerce. However, it will come at a cost that is not low, as opening up the economy for competition surely will reduce the policy space of the government. The government needs policy space to regulate for public interest. It remains to be seen how the TPP w
Viewpoints Aug. 25, 2016
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[Antonio Garza] Don’t let this presidential election rip us apart
Every four-years we have an election that stretches our country thin along the political spectrum. As the left and right poles tug at our beliefs, the social fabric tightens and tensions rise across the country. But after each November, our political divisions slowly fade and the social fabric waves freely once again. This time, however, I’m worried that we may not get that far, I’m worried that we are watching it rip. Take a look at the anger foaming over at rallies. The slurs hurled at those
Viewpoints Aug. 21, 2016
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[Andrew Sheng] The imminent threat of climate change
Until very recently, few mainstream economists took climate change seriously in projecting growth. Weather is something the polite talk about when they have nothing to say. Today, climate change is moving onto center stage. Most people equate climate change with global warming. But climate change could be excessive heat, cold, or simply larger variations in temperature that could cause drought, floods, typhoons and other disasters at the same time. The large volcanic eruption like Krakotoa in
Viewpoints Aug. 21, 2016
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[Park Sang-seek] Current challenges to US global leadership
Recently, a debate on whether US hegemony in the world is declining and whether it is necessary for world peace has intensified in both West and non-West. This debate has also become a top campaign issue in the American presidential election. The leaders of the non-Western countries antagonistic to the US, including Russia and China, vehemently condemn American hegemony and its ideological foundation, American exceptionalism. A majority of the intellectuals in the non-West are also critical of
Viewpoints Aug. 21, 2016
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[David Ignatius] The Islamic State has made a big mistake
In the global revulsion at the past week’s terror attacks in four Muslim countries, the United States and its allies have a new opportunity to build a unified command against the Islamic State and other extremists. But as the U.S. seeks to broaden this counterterrorism alliance, it should be careful about partnering with Russia -- unless Moscow distances itself from a Syrian regime that many Sunni Muslims despise. The savage attacks in Turkey, Bangladesh, Iraq and Saudi Arabia should convince Mu
Viewpoints July 8, 2016
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[Sinan Ulgen] The southern strategy NATO needs
For almost seven decades, NATO has amply demonstrated its ability to fulfill its core mission of deterring a conventional attack against its member countries. But the threat landscape on NATO’s southern flank is changing, pushing the alliance toward uncharted waters. This week’s NATO summit in Warsaw will amount to a litmus test of the Alliance’s ability to adapt to the new more complex security challenges that it faces. Since the Cold War, when it was positioned as a bulwark against Soviet expa
Viewpoints July 8, 2016
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[Suthichai Yoon] Civil power antidote to income gap
Can growing wealth concentration — which has become a global threat to peace — be halted? This was the question posed by Muhammad Yunus, Bangladesh’s Nobel Peace Prize-winning pioneer of microcredit and microfinance, at 25th-anniversary celebrations for the Daily Star newspaper in Dhaka recently. Not content with merely raising such a crucial query, Yunus ventured an answer for the audience of several thousand. Oxfam, he noted, had just delivered a horrifying update on wealth concentration. “Th
Viewpoints April 15, 2016
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[Rachel Marsden] Russia, U.S. should unite versus Saudi-China
If the Central Intelligence Agency’s role is to discreetly promote the economic and political interests of the United States, then there’s one country that ought to be awfully disappointing to the agency right now: Saudi Arabia. In fact, if there’s an issue on which America and Russia could potentially agree, it would be the damage Saudi Arabia has recently wrought upon the national and economic security of both nations. Take Syria, for example. The CIA operation to train Syrian rebels goes by t
Viewpoints April 15, 2016
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[J. Bradford DeLong] Debunking America’s populist narrative
One does not need to be particularly good at hearing to decipher the dog whistles being used during this year’s election campaign in the United States. Listen even briefly, and you will understand that Mexicans and Chinese are working with Wall Street to forge lousy trade deals that rob American workers of their rightful jobs, and that Muslims want to blow everyone up. All of this fear mongering is scarier than the usual election-year fare. It is frightening to people in foreign countries, who c
Viewpoints April 3, 2016
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[David Ignatius] China’s political turbulence
China’s intelligence service, the Ministry of State Security, offers a snapshot of the political intrigue taking place within the regime of President Xi Jinping. The MSS has replaced two vice ministers within the last four years, after reports of political infighting and scandal. The current minister is said to be a figurehead, with the real power held by a hard-line Xi loyalist who was drafted last year from the party’s discipline commission. This shake-up within the intelligence service mirr
Viewpoints April 3, 2016
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[Elizabeth Drew] Causes behind Trump’s Republican success
Whatever becomes of his candidacy — whether he wins the Republican Party’s nomination or is even elected president of the United States — Americans and the rest of the world will be wondering for a long time how the phenomenon of Donald Trump happened. They are already doing so. The first thing to understand is that American political parties have nothing to do with who runs for the U.S. presidency. In fact, U.S. political parties amount to a collection of functionaries who arrange the process o
Viewpoints April 3, 2016
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[Michael R. Bloomberg & Joe Biden] Curing cancer within reach
One of the most frightening words a patient can hear from a doctor is “cancer.” We know it from the experience of our families and friends, and the millions of Americans who hear it directly from their doctors each year. In President Barack Obama’s final State of the Union address, he compared the effort required to eradicate cancer to a “moon shot,” summoning the American ingenuity and scientific pursuits that sent humankind to the moon. We believe that it’s time for a full and complete nationa
Viewpoints April 3, 2016
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[N. Balakrishnan] Hong Kong’s refugee vetting system failing
As anyone who steps out of their home knows, it takes money to travel, and the further away from home you are, the more money it takes. We have to keep this in mind when we read about ill-informed news reports about “penniless” refugees and “asylum” seekers who somehow manage to travel halfway across the world with supposedly not a penny to their name! Hong Kong has recently seen increasing numbers of people from places such as Somalia, India and Pakistan arriving to seek “asylum.” Logic dictate
Viewpoints April 3, 2016
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[Fabiola Santiago] After Obama visit, Cuba needs support for change
“You come here wanting to hear salsa. I want to hear rock ’n’ roll.” Cuban singer David Rico of the group Aire Libre (Open Air) at Havana’s Yellow Submarine club. There’s more than musical preference in this young rocker’s assessment of how Americans relate to Cuba in this “new day” branded by President Barack Obama and set to irreverent music by the Rolling Stones. For Cubans hoping to build a society with freedom of speech, assembly and free elections as cornerstones, “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfa
Viewpoints March 27, 2016
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[David Scheffer] Justice delayed, not denied, in Bosnia
On March 24, the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia sentenced Radovan Karadzic -- the political leader of the Bosnian Serbs during the 1990s war in the Balkans -- to 40 years in prison for genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes. It is a judgment that will profoundly influence international law, deter those who might otherwise commit atrocities, and open the possibility of political reconciliation in Bosnia. Lawless leaders, such as those in Syria, Sudan, South S
Viewpoints March 27, 2016
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