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[Vitit Muntarbhorn] Introducing the new cybercrime treaty
In October, a key ASEAN country will host a raft of countries for the signing ceremony of the new Cybercrime treaty. Its full (and rather wordy) title is: the “United Nations Convention against Cybercrime; Strengthening International Cooperation for Combating Certain Crimes Committed by Means of Information and Communications Technology Systems and for the Sharing of Evidence in Electronic Form of Serious Crimes.” Will this “Cybercrime Convention” be an epiphany for those who seek effective lega
Sept. 30, 2025 -
[Andrew Sheng] Shifts in complex financial systems
Are we in a cyclical or structural point of inflection in what is happening in financial markets? The cyclical view is that in the short term we are going up or down a stock market bubble. The structural view is that there are deep structural issues that are changing contextually the whole environment of financial markets, driven by real factors such as globalization (or de-globalization), technology, demographics, climate change and confusing local and geo-politics. The simple answer is that we
Sept. 30, 2025 -
[Editorial] Duplicate the network
A fire at a major state data center halted 647 government services at the same time. The state administration has been effectively paralyzed. The National Information Resources Service under the Ministry of the Interior and Safety provides 1,600 government services online, and more than a third of them were down due to a fire in a computer room at its headquarters in Daejeon on Friday. Restoring the 96 systems damaged or destroyed by the fire is expected to take considerable time. It is deplorab
Sept. 30, 2025 -
[Matthew Mitchell, Peter Boettke] Make America capitalist again
With the federal government now the largest shareholder of Intel, an ostensibly private company, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick wants you to know that “This is not socialism.” But if public ownership of the means of production isn’t socialism, what is? With feverish speed and characteristic blunderbuss, President Donald Trump has given the federal government -- and himself -- unprecedented control over private economic decisions. Call it socialism, economic nationalism or any “-ism” you want.
Sept. 29, 2025 -
[Yoo Choon-sik] Key conditions for winning AI talent worldwide
The Lee Jae Myung government has declared that the nation’s future hinges heavily on maximizing artificial intelligence innovation. It aims to transform an already wired, tech-savvy nation into one where AI is not just a tool but the backbone of its economy and society. While hardware, models and technologies are vital to the AI-driven transformation of the entire society, they are insufficient without the right people to build, manage and innovate with them. Talent is just as critical — if not
Sept. 29, 2025 -
[Editorial] Tariff stalemate
Trade disputes rarely spiral into full-blown economic crises. Yet the latest standoff between South Korea and the United States over tariffs and a $350 billion investment package is doing precisely that — unsettling markets, testing diplomatic trust and forcing both governments into an awkward contest of brinkmanship. At issue is US President Donald Trump’s demand that Seoul’s pledge be delivered not as loans or guarantees but as “upfront” cash or equity. President Lee Jae Myung has warned that
Sept. 29, 2025 -
[Lee Byung-jong] Trump’s doppelganger in Seoul
US President Donald Trump and South Korean President Lee Jae Myung are separated by thousands of kilometers, yet they share striking similarities. Both wield considerable executive authority, face weakened opposition forces and enjoy the backing of fervent supporters. Both have faced legal challenges, with criminal charges pending, though trials were largely suspended after they were elected. Each battled prosecutors during their campaigns and now seek to curb judicial power to advance their age
Sept. 26, 2025 -
[Editorial] Korea’s growth mirage
The International Monetary Fund’s latest forecast for South Korea offers a small lift laced with a warning. Growth this year is projected at 0.9 percent, a notch above the IMF's earlier estimate and neatly aligned with the Bank of Korea’s outlook. The uptick, fueled by resilient semiconductor exports and fiscal largesse at home, is the kind of revision Seoul is tempted to celebrate. But it should not. Buried in the IMF’s analysis is a sharper verdict: Without structural reform, the government’s
Sept. 26, 2025 -
[Wang Son-taek] What Kim Jong-un wants
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un’s address to the Supreme People’s Assembly on Sunday was an unusually significant foreign-policy speech, with nearly half devoted to external relations. Unlike many routine domestic policy reports, this speech clearly laid out Pyongyang’s position on the United States, South Korea and the future of the Korean Peninsula. For analysts and policymakers, it offers a rare opportunity to gauge Kim’s strategic thinking. The most striking part of Kim’s address was his imp
Sept. 25, 2025 -
[Reed Galen] Budget impasse, broken democracy
It’s September in Washington, and everyone knows what that means: the United States Congress is scrambling to agree on a budget before the fiscal year ends on Sept. 30, in order to avoid a government shutdown. This was not always the case. Historically, Congress spent this month tying up loose ends, after spending the year reviewing White House budget requests, listening to lobbyists and inserting whatever pork-barrel projects were needed to ensure the national budget legislation’s timely passag
Sept. 25, 2025 -
[Editorial] One team
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un said in a speech to the Supreme People's Assembly on Sunday that there is no reason to avoid dialogue with the US if it stops insisting that his country give up nuclear weapons. This is an expression of his intention to engage in talks only if denuclearization is off the agenda. The US administration has made it clear that the goal of its North Korea policy is to denuclearize the country. However, security experts in South Korea and the US have consistently raised
Sept. 25, 2025 -
[Kim Seong-kon] Korea needs wisdom, strength and courage
To survive and thrive in the vortex of international crises, it is imperative that we are wise, strong and courageous. We tend to think that wise men are not strong or courageous, and strong and courageous men are not wise. That is not so. Wisdom, strength and courage are closely interrelated and intertwined. Indeed, wisdom without strength and courage is problematic, and so is strength and courage without wisdom. It is appropriate that, in Greek myth, Athena is the goddess not only of wisdom bu
Sept. 24, 2025 -
[Martin Schram] An offer they feared to refuse
The lines read as if they wouldn’t be spoken until Marlon Brando finished stuffing that cotton in his mouth so he’d sound just right when “The Godfather” cameras rolled. But this time they sounded unmistakably clear. “We can do this the easy way or the hard way,” a clear-speaking, cotton-free figure said, quite ominously. “Companies can find ways to change conduct and take action, frankly, on Kimmel, or there’s going to be additional work for the FCC ahead.” This wasn’t Brando doing his Hollywoo
Sept. 24, 2025 -
[Editorial] Pricing out talent
It is one thing to put a price on opportunity, quite another to place it beyond reach. By signing a proclamation last Friday to raise the H-1B visa fee from $1,000 to an eye-watering $100,000, US President Donald Trump has turned what was a bureaucratic formality into an economic moat. A gateway for global talent has been recast as a tollbooth designed less to collect revenue than to block passage altogether. The move is more than fiscal bravado. It is the clearest signal yet that the Trump admi
Sept. 24, 2025 -
[Noah Feldman] Blaming violence on free speech is a very old trick
In the wake of Charlie Kirk’s assassination, the Trump administration is following a very specific, very old script. It argues that political speech causes political violence, and that this speech must therefore be punished. It is imperative that all defenders of free speech — whether on the left, right or in the center — reject this narrative from the outset. For more than a century, the American understanding of free speech has been that political expression may only be punished when it incite
Sept. 23, 2025