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BusinessWeek April 8, 2010 Moon Ihlwan |
How Korea Fretted Its Way to Success Years of worrying about being squeezed by China and Japan helped Seoul stand up to its rivals. Now it's obsessed with finding the Next Big Thing. |
BusinessWeek March 29, 2004 Moon Ihlwan |
Korea's China Play They're partners now. But in the future, China will dominate this powerful relationship |
BusinessWeek February 17, 2010 Moon Ihlwan |
Korean Tech Is Losing Its Cool How did Korea, a onetime digital trendsetter, became a laggard in an era of smartphones and amazing apps. |
BusinessWeek December 8, 2003 Moon Ihlwan |
Look Who Owns Korea Inc. Foreigners hold more and more shares as burned Koreans continue to shun stocks. The market's dependence on foreign money presents an obvious risk: If a crisis erupts, that capital could flee in a matter of days. |
BusinessWeek April 25, 2005 Moon Ihlwan |
South Korea: Auto Parts Mecca It has become a magnet for component makers, but can it stay ahead of China? |
BusinessWeek June 6, 2005 Moon Ihlwan |
South Korea: Waiting For A Tiger To Wake Up Seoul claims the economy is coming to life, but the signs are decidedly mixed. |
BusinessWeek March 8, 2004 Moon Ihlwan in Seoul |
Want Innovation? Hire A Russian Korean companies are cashing in by signing up low-cost engineers |
BusinessWeek March 21, 2005 Moon Ihlwan |
Made In Korea: Axles, Wipers, And Brakes The country has become a magnet for auto-parts manufacturers, but can it stay ahead of China? |
TIME Asia November 15, 2010 Michael Schuman |
Asia's Latest Miracle Over the past decade, Korea has reinvented itself. It has become an innovator, an economy that doesn't just make stuff, but designs and develops products, infuses them with the latest technology, and then brands and markets them worldwide, with style and smarts. |
BusinessWeek July 12, 2004 Moon Ihlwan |
Koreans' Wallets Are Slamming Shut Burdened by debt, consumers aren't shopping, and that's putting a lid on growth. |
BusinessWeek October 8, 2007 Moon Ihlwan |
What's Propelling Korea's Growth Korea's steel mills, shipbuilders, petrochemical operations, and other smokestack industries are helping its economy surge. |
BusinessWeek March 24, 2011 Einhorn & Park |
Japan's Quake May Boost Korean Industry With Japan hobbled for six months or more, Korean steelmakers and shipbuilders have a chance to make permanent gains in market share. |
Geotimes October 2005 Katie Donnelly |
A Denuclearized Korean Peninsula South Korea is not alone in having a different perspective than the United States about North Korea. Even though the other countries involved in the Six Party Talks have vested interests in a denuclearized Korean peninsula, each sees the problem of North Korea in a different light with different solutions. |
InternetNews March 10, 2004 Michael Singer |
Intel's New R&D Center Has Seoul The chipmaker will focus on wireless communications technology and other advances at its South Korea lab. |
BusinessWeek November 24, 2003 Moon Ihlwan |
South Korea: Plugging Into Batteries In A Big Way Korean investments in plants and research threaten Japan's dominance. |
BusinessWeek March 14, 2005 Moon Ihlwan |
Fund Frenzy Hits Korea Cleaned-up brokerages have won back retail investors' trust in Korea. |
BusinessWeek December 3, 2009 Moon Ihlwan |
Do the Chaebol Choke Off Innovation? South Korea's giant family-based conglomerates are thriving, but they may be crushing small companies. |
The Motley Fool March 7, 2011 Tony Arsta |
South Korea: Don't Call It an "Emerging Market" Korea's no more an emerging market than Pittsburgh is a city on the Pacific. |
BusinessWeek July 2, 2007 Moon Ihlwan |
Korea's New School Of Thought As growth cools, Korea looks for an education model that spurs innovation. |
BusinessWeek October 22, 2007 Roberts & Ihlwan |
North Korea's Warming Trend North Korea's sick economy may be on the mend as Chinese and South Korean businesses step up investment. |
BusinessWeek September 23, 2010 Yoon & Seo |
The Pitfalls in the Rise of the Korean Won Strong exports and profits are driving the won skyward and could spell an end to the days of easy profits in Korea. |
Information Today October 24, 2013 |
Springer Announces Korean OA Journal and Book Series Springer Science+Business Media will publish new South Korean content in partnership with the Korea Nano Technology Research Society and KAIST (Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology) Press. |
Information Today November 27, 2014 |
Thomson Reuters Adds Korean Content to Web of Science The Intellectual Property & Science business of Thomson Reuters integrated Korea Citation Index content from South Korea's National Research Foundation of Korea into its Web of Science discovery platform. |
Wired May 2005 Frank Rose |
Seoul Machine Cell phones. Memory chips. Plasma TVs. How Samsung made Korea a consumer electronics superpower. |
BusinessWeek September 9, 2010 Campbell & Lim |
North Korea's Knack for Games Pays Off Software exports may help buttress a sagging economy. |
BusinessWeek September 13, 2004 Cooper & Madigan |
South Korea: Debt-Laden -- And Facing Slower Exports The country's economy faces more hurdles in the coming year: slower spending, slower exports, declining industrial production, stagflation and a housing bubble. |
BusinessWeek March 26, 2007 Ihlwan & Hall |
New Tech, Old Habits Despite world-class IT networks, Japanese and Korean workers are still chained to their desks. |
BusinessWeek July 1, 2010 Drajem & Naughton |
The $68 Billion U.S.-South Korea Trade Question Ford and the UAW want Washington to keep a 25 percent tariff on pickup truck imports into the U.S., but South Korea wants it phased out. |
BusinessWeek September 29, 2003 Moon Ihlwan |
Is Another Bubble About to Pop in Korea? Probably not. This broadband boom looks built to last. |
BusinessWeek May 21, 2009 Moon Ihlwan |
Kia Motors' Cheap Chic Thanks to German design chief Peter Schreyer, the Korean carmaker is making a splash at home and plans to do the same in the U.S. |
BusinessWeek April 12, 2004 Moon Ihlwan |
Korea Is In No Danger From These Foreign Invaders Sure, investors are reaping fat profits. But they helped revive Korean banks |
Reason July 2003 Doug Bandow |
Cutting the Tripwire It's time for the U.S. to get out of Korea |
BusinessWeek October 24, 2005 Moon Ihlwan |
Behind Samsung's Bright Lights Wild success, but how much does one family's tight control cost Samsung shareholders? |
InternetNews March 22, 2005 Jim Wagner |
OSDL Signs First Korean Member The Linux organization's clout in the burgeoning Asia-Pacific region grows with the inclusion of South Korea's joint-country government initiative. |
BusinessWeek October 14, 2009 Moon Ihlwan |
Korean Exporters' Won Advantage The currency has strengthened, but it's still below 2007 levels. That is making many Korean products a bargain. |
BusinessWeek July 24, 2006 Ihlwan & Roberts |
Lifeline From China A visit to bustling Dandong shows why economic sanctions against North Korea may not work. |
BusinessWeek July 21, 2003 Moon Ihlwan |
Hyundai's Hurdles Will union unrest slow the auto maker's global growth drive? |
BusinessWeek March 20, 2006 Moon Ihlwan |
Hands Across The DMZ North Korea is home to a huge, cheap, and underemployed workforce. South Korea needs a low-wage manufacturing base to compete with China. The result is outsourced work for South Korean capitalists. |
HBS Working Knowledge October 11, 2010 Carmen Nobel |
It Pays to Hire Women in Countries That Won't South Korean companies don't hire many women, no matter how qualified. So multinationals are moving in to take advantage of this rich hiring opportunity, according to new research by professor Jordan Siegel. |
BusinessWeek January 24, 2005 Moon Ihlwan |
Putting Investors First -- Sometimes LG Electronics is on its way to becoming a world-class electronics and appliance company. But a world-class investment? That depends on how much progress it makes on the vital issue of governance. |
Sports Illustrated May 31, 2002 Grant Wahl |
Inside out Through the lens of the Miracle on Grass exploits of North Korea's 1966 World Cup team, a different North Korea emerges... |
BusinessWeek July 18, 2005 Moon Ihlwan |
Honing Its Digital Game Seoul is spending billions of dollars, and working closely with private companies, to get ahead of the IT pack. |
IEEE Spectrum August 2010 Dana Mackenzie |
Korea Has the Fastest Internet Paradoxically, as Internet connectivity becomes ubiquitous, it gets worse -- the average connection in South Korea, as well as in some of the leading U.S. states, has gotten slower over the past year. |
BusinessWeek April 18, 2005 Moon Ihlwan |
I Think I'll Watch TV -- On My Cell Phone As free mobile broadcasting nears in South Korea, cell carriers may lose revenue. |
PC Magazine September 2, 2009 Sascha Segan |
A World Without Apple? South Korea shows what the world might look like if the iPod and iPhone had never happened. |
BusinessWeek July 25, 2005 |
Seoul Gives The North A Power Boost South Korea, in an effort to defuse the nuclear crisis with the north, has offered Pyongyang a vast supply of badly needed electricity. |
BusinessWeek October 25, 2004 Bremner & Tashiro |
Japan: Quickly Leaving Pacifism Behind Threats of economic sanctions against North Korea, possible preemptive military strikes, and a missile defense system buildup -- welcome to the new, and surprisingly robust, Japanese national security policy. |
The Motley Fool August 21, 2007 Emil Lee |
HSBC Banks on Korea HSBC may snap up a majority stake in Korea Exchange Bank, but only if regulators don't get in the way. Restrictive regulations make it especially tough for foreigners to break into Korean banking. |
BusinessWeek November 8, 2004 Moon Ihlwan |
Citi In Korea: Forget The Honeymoon A backlash against foreign influence in banking is gaining momentum. |
AskMen.com |
A Missile Strike On Hawaii? North Korea may fire a long-range ballistic missile toward Hawaii in early July, a Japanese news report said Thursday, as Russia and China urged the regime to return to international disarmament talks on its rogue nuclear program. |