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Second female PM

Timing is often an unruly thing. Many pundits have stressed the importance of timing in life. What I mean to say is, it is high time that Korea usher in another woman into a higher government office. The nation produced its first female president, Park Geun-hye, who served from 2013 until her disgraceful removal from office in 2017, and its first female prime minister, Han Myeong-sook, who served in the Roh Moo-hyun administration from 2006-07. Han Seong-sook, the current minister of SMEs and startups, has been tapped to become the next prime minister by President Lee Jae Myung. If she passes muster at the parliamentary hearings — which she did once before assuming the small and medium-sized enterprises ministership by promising, among other things, to sell off some of her real estate — she will become the second woman to become prime minister in Korean history. As Korea shifts gears to go headlong into the era of artificial intelligence (AI), Han's earlier career at IT company Naver is key. Her business background is different from the two women, Park and Han Myeong-sook who were

3 MIN READBy Kim Ji-soo

When nobody wants a piano anymore

I was in the fourth grade when my parents bought me a piano. I had been taking lessons for two years and wanted one desperately. When it arrived in the room I shared with my brother, I felt as if I had the whole world. Part of the excitement came from the sense of privilege. Few children in my class had a piano at home, and I suddenly became one of them. The instrument my parents bought was not new. It was a secondhand upright piano. Yet that hardly mattered to me. What mattered was that I finally had a piano to practice on — and, to be honest, to show off to friends who visited me at home. That sense of pride stayed with me for years. In fact, the piano remained in my childhood room longer than I did. When I left home for college, it stayed. When I graduated from graduate school and started working, it was still there. In 2008, when I was 28, the piano moved to my aunt's apartment in Seoul, where it served her two children, then ages 7 and 10, who were learning to play. Years later, she passed it on to an acquaintance. Three years ago, another piano entered my life. An acquaintance of

3 MIN READBy Kim Se-jeong

Staunch president, docile diplomats

For decades, Korea’s foreign policy establishment has prided itself on caution, restraint and alliance management. Its diplomats often described these traits as sophisticated — the habits of a mature middle power navigating a dangerous neighborhood. Yet the recent handling of the Israeli seizure of aid vessels carrying two Korean activists exposed the dark underbelly of that carefully cultivated image: a culture of bureaucratic self-preservation that too often mistakes timidity for prudence. The situation revealed not only a disagreement over diplomatic tactics, but the widening gap between a Korean public that increasingly demands a confident, sovereign foreign policy and the entrenched elite in those circles who are conditioned to avoid discomfort at almost any cost. In particular, the episode highlighted the contrast between political pressure for transparent and assertive action and the instinctive caution of Korea’s traditional diplomatic establishment. Figures such as National Security Adviser Wi Sung-lac and Second Vice Foreign Minister Kim Jina symbolize this mindset, whi

3 MIN READBy Shim Jae-yun

Korea’s risk-free schools

For many Koreans, school trips from elementary, middle and high school are lifelong memories. Those from Seoul mostly headed to Gyeongju, North Gyeongsang Province, to see cultural relics such as Bulguksa temple, and even rundown motels became part of the fun when shared with classmates. However, as President Lee Jae Myung recently remarked, it seems these experiences are becoming a thing of the past. “I hear that these days, students don’t go on picnics or school trips much anymore,” he said in a Cabinet meeting, lamenting that they are “taking away good opportunities from students just to avoid responsibility.” According to the Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education, only 31 percent of elementary, middle and high schools in Seoul have announced plans to conduct daytime field trips this year. Overnight field trips are decreasing even further, with only 17 percent of schools planning to do so. Behind the plunge are the excessive legal and emotional risks borne by teachers. In a survey by the Elementary School Teachers’ Union, 96 percent of teachers who responded expressed a ne

3 MIN READBy Yoon Ja-young

Guest Columns

  • When healing becomes a product

    Modern Korean life is fast, efficient and relentlessly demanding. Academic pressure, social expectations and digital overload have created a population that is now deeply familiar with the term “burnout.” In response, a counterculture has naturally emerged — one focused on slowing down, resting and healing. But instead of developing organically, this healing culture has quickly taken on a more commercial, polished and curated form. A K-turn, perhaps. Healing has become a language — appearing everywhere from menus and social media to convenience store shelves. It’s no longer a concept or a suggestion. It has become an industry and it raises an uncomfortable question: Is Korea truly healing, or has healing itself become something to consume? Massages used to be an occasional luxury. Now, many households invest in massaging reclining sofas, often costing between 1 million ($660) and 2 million won. Drinks are branded with words like “detox,” “reset,” “cleansing” or “calming.” Many retreats — often labeled luxury — promise transformations in just a few days. Re

    4 MIN READBy Han Sang-hee
  • POSCO’s debt in Brazil casts shadow over Korea-Brazil partnership

    Brazil and Korea maintain a relationship that extends far beyond economic interests. Since the establishment of diplomatic relations in 1959, the two countries have not only deepened their commercial ties but also built a shared development agenda in areas such as technology, energy and culture. Earlier this year, they formally elevated their relationship to a strategic partnership, signing 10 bilateral agreements and an action plan covering the period from 2026 to 2029. The numbers speak for themselves. Bilateral trade between the two countries reached $11 billion in 2025, with balanced flows of $5.5 billion in each direction. Korea is Brazil’s fourth-largest trading partner in Asia and its 13th-largest trading partner worldwide. Beyond economic ties, the relationship between these countries is reinforced by strong human and cultural connections. Brazil is home to the largest Korean community in Latin America, with more than 50,000 people of Korean origin and descent. Furthermore, driven by the global expansion of Korean culture, known as hallyu, Brazil has emerged as the world’s

    5 MIN READBy José Eduardo Cardozo

Tribune Service

  • US should invest in people, not wars

    Elected officials throughout the country are failing to help their constituents, which is their job. Right now in the United States, too many people in power work instead to represent corporate interests, billionaire donors and an oligarch class focused on preserving its advantages. It is a betrayal that millions of ordinary Americans feel every day. We see it at the store, as tariffs have caused the price of products to skyrocket. We feel it at the gas pump, where the national average price per gallon rests well over $4. We notice it in the costs of child care and health care, which are unaffordable for many working families. On top of it all, President Donald Trump recently declared that it’s “not possible” for the federal government to fund Medicare and Medicaid and cover child care costs because “We’re fighting wars.” The Trump administration has escalated a war in Iran with no clear way out, and we’re all paying the price. Working people’s tax dollars are being poured into violence abroad while families here struggle to survive on their already-tight budgets. For exam

    3 MIN READBy Ashley Panelli and Mica Whitfield
  • Save our endangered kelp forests

    3 MIN READBy David Helvarg
  • Is a UFC fight at the White House who we really are?

    Polls indicate that President Donald Trump is doing a lot that most Americans don’t support: The war with Iran; the arbitrary tariffs; the retribution campaign against his perceived enemies; the 250-foot Triumphal Arch; the $1.776 billion fund intended to reward Trump loyalists. (Even Republicans don’t like that one!) There’s so much that it’s hard to know what’s important. In the middle of a war against Iran, does it really matter if Trump’s vanity leads him to appropriate top billing at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts? Still, it’s hard to predict the consequences of acts that seem trivial at the time. Consider the Ultimate Fighting Championship cage fights that Trump is sponsoring on the White House lawn on June 14 as part of America’s 250th anniversary celebration. June 14 also happens to be Trump’s 80th birthday. It’s not clear why any sport needs to be part of the celebration of our country’s nativity, but if we’re going to stage a sporting event on the White House lawn, why UFC? Trump, of course, is pals with Dana White, the president and

    3 MIN READBy John M. Crisp

Columnists

  • Jason Lim

    Jason Lim is a Washington, D.C.-based expert on innovation, leadership and organizational culture.

  • Kim Sung-woo

    Kim Sung-woo is the head of Environment & Energy Research Institute at Kim & Chang.

  • Bernard Rowan

    Bernard Rowan is an associate provost for contract administration and professor of political science at Chicago State University.

  • Michael Breen

    Michael Breen is the CEO of Insight Communications Consultants, a public relations company, and author of "The Koreans" and "Kim Jong-il: North Korea's Dear Leader."

  • Park Jung-won

    Park Jung-won, Ph.D. in law from the London School of Economics (LSE), is a professor of international law at Dankook University.

  • Peter S. Kim

    Peter S. Kim is a managing director at KB Securities.

Read more

Guest Columns

When healing becomes a product

Modern Korean life is fast, efficient and relentlessly demanding. Academic pressure, social expectations and digital overload have created a population that is now deeply familiar with the term “burnout.” In response, a counterculture has naturally emerged — one focused on slowing down, resting and healing. But instead of developing organically, this healing culture has quickly taken on a more commercial, polished and curated form. A K-turn, perhaps. Healing has become a language — appearing everywhere from menus and social media to convenience store shelves. It’s no longer a concept or a suggestion. It has become an industry and it raises an uncomfortable question: Is Korea truly healing, or has healing itself become something to consume? Massages used to be an occasional luxury. Now, many households invest in massaging reclining sofas, often costing between 1 million ($660) and 2 million won. Drinks are branded with words like “detox,” “reset,” “cleansing” or “calming.” Many retreats — often labeled luxury — promise transformations in just a few days. Re

7h agoBy Han Sang-hee
When healing becomes a product
Tribune Service

US should invest in people, not wars

Elected officials throughout the country are failing to help their constituents, which is their job. Right now in the United States, too many people in power work instead to represent corporate interests, billionaire donors and an oligarch class focused on preserving its advantages. It is a betrayal that millions of ordinary Americans feel every day. We see it at the store, as tariffs have caused the price of products to skyrocket. We feel it at the gas pump, where the national average price per gallon rests well over $4. We notice it in the costs of child care and health care, which are unaffordable for many working families. On top of it all, President Donald Trump recently declared that it’s “not possible” for the federal government to fund Medicare and Medicaid and cover child care costs because “We’re fighting wars.” The Trump administration has escalated a war in Iran with no clear way out, and we’re all paying the price. Working people’s tax dollars are being poured into violence abroad while families here struggle to survive on their already-tight budgets. For exam

12h agoBy Ashley Panelli and Mica Whitfield
Guest Columns

POSCO’s debt in Brazil casts shadow over Korea-Brazil partnership

Brazil and Korea maintain a relationship that extends far beyond economic interests. Since the establishment of diplomatic relations in 1959, the two countries have not only deepened their commercial ties but also built a shared development agenda in areas such as technology, energy and culture. Earlier this year, they formally elevated their relationship to a strategic partnership, signing 10 bilateral agreements and an action plan covering the period from 2026 to 2029. The numbers speak for themselves. Bilateral trade between the two countries reached $11 billion in 2025, with balanced flows of $5.5 billion in each direction. Korea is Brazil’s fourth-largest trading partner in Asia and its 13th-largest trading partner worldwide. Beyond economic ties, the relationship between these countries is reinforced by strong human and cultural connections. Brazil is home to the largest Korean community in Latin America, with more than 50,000 people of Korean origin and descent. Furthermore, driven by the global expansion of Korean culture, known as hallyu, Brazil has emerged as the world’s

13h agoBy José Eduardo Cardozo
POSCO’s debt in Brazil casts shadow over Korea-Brazil partnership
Tribune Service

Save our endangered kelp forests

Until recently, the main threats to kelp and coral reefs were overfishing and pollution. Now it’s our warming seas. A study carried out by scientists from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and 30 other institutions around the world reports that the ocean absorbed more heat last year than ever before. Now the agency is predicting a record-breaking El Niño (periodic Pacific warming) this year that will impact global weather. This bad news about a changing climate comes on top of a marine heatwave currently stretching from Micronesia to coastal California. Scientists say it’s likely to become more severe than the heat wave known as the “Blob,” which appeared off the Pacific coast between 2013 and 2017 and contributed to widespread loss of marine life and kelp forests on the West coast. These oceanic heat waves can increase regional water temperatures 4-8 degrees or more, leading not only to critical habitat loss —84% of the world’s coral reefs experienced bleaching in 2025 alone — but also generating more severe storms and torrential rainfalls, as wa

13h agoBy David Helvarg
Save our endangered kelp forests
Desk Columns

Second female PM

Timing is often an unruly thing. Many pundits have stressed the importance of timing in life. What I mean to say is, it is high time that Korea usher in another woman into a higher government office. The nation produced its first female president, Park Geun-hye, who served from 2013 until her disgraceful removal from office in 2017, and its first female prime minister, Han Myeong-sook, who served in the Roh Moo-hyun administration from 2006-07. Han Seong-sook, the current minister of SMEs and startups, has been tapped to become the next prime minister by President Lee Jae Myung. If she passes muster at the parliamentary hearings — which she did once before assuming the small and medium-sized enterprises ministership by promising, among other things, to sell off some of her real estate — she will become the second woman to become prime minister in Korean history. As Korea shifts gears to go headlong into the era of artificial intelligence (AI), Han's earlier career at IT company Naver is key. Her business background is different from the two women, Park and Han Myeong-sook who were

1d agoBy Kim Ji-soo
Second female PM
Guest Columns

Are Korean boycotts intense but temporary?

SEATTLE — Just over three weeks after Starbucks Korea sparked outrage with its "Tank Day" promotion that coincided with the May 18 Gwangju Uprising, the company is already showing signs of a comeback. Starbucks gift certificates have once again become the most popular item in the cafe category on KakaoTalk's gift service, part of Korea's dominant messaging app, after briefly losing the top position in the wake of the controversy. The development comes despite continuing fallout from the incident, which sparked calls for a boycott, public apologies and a management reshuffle at Starbucks Korea. Shinsegae Group Chairman Chung Yong-jin also publicly apologized and recently assumed direct leadership of E-mart, the affiliate that oversees Starbucks Korea. Despite the consequences, the episode revives a familiar question in Korea: Why do so many consumer boycotts appear to follow a similar pattern? The Starbucks controversy is only the latest example. The incident triggered one of the most visible consumer backlashes of the year. Customers shared photos of canceled Starbucks cards and refunde

1d agoBy Jane Han
Are Korean boycotts intense but temporary?
Tribune Service

Is a UFC fight at the White House who we really are?

Polls indicate that President Donald Trump is doing a lot that most Americans don’t support: The war with Iran; the arbitrary tariffs; the retribution campaign against his perceived enemies; the 250-foot Triumphal Arch; the $1.776 billion fund intended to reward Trump loyalists. (Even Republicans don’t like that one!) There’s so much that it’s hard to know what’s important. In the middle of a war against Iran, does it really matter if Trump’s vanity leads him to appropriate top billing at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts? Still, it’s hard to predict the consequences of acts that seem trivial at the time. Consider the Ultimate Fighting Championship cage fights that Trump is sponsoring on the White House lawn on June 14 as part of America’s 250th anniversary celebration. June 14 also happens to be Trump’s 80th birthday. It’s not clear why any sport needs to be part of the celebration of our country’s nativity, but if we’re going to stage a sporting event on the White House lawn, why UFC? Trump, of course, is pals with Dana White, the president and

1d agoBy John M. Crisp
Guest Columns

Using AI to test policy language

WASHINGTON, DC — Earlier this year, researchers at Anthropic made a remarkable discovery. Studying the internal mechanisms of Claude Sonnet 4.5, the company’s large language model (LLM), they identified what they called “emotion concepts”: internal patterns that correspond to dozens of emotional states and measurably influence the model’s responses in ways that resemble human behavioral patterns. The implications for economic policymaking could be far-reaching. By offering a new way to study how language shapes emotional and behavioral responses, LLMs could help policymakers test how investors, political coalitions, and households are likely to react to policy announcements. Policymakers have long understood that language affects how information is processed. That is why central banks carefully calibrate their forward guidance, while government officials pay great attention to how fiscal-policy and tariff announcements will land with markets and voters. But until recently, there were few tools capable of systematically analyzing how language itself functions as an instrument

1d agoBy Monica de Bolle
Using AI to test policy language
Jason Lim

How dare coffee?!

"How dare coffee?!" Those were the words uttered by a TV news anchor in a clip that went viral in Korea. He was condemning the perfidy of Starbucks in making light of the May 18, 1980 Gwangju Massacre by the military forces of Chun Doo-hwan. Despite the ubiquity of Starbucks in the most coffee-crazed country in the world, an insensitive “Tank Day” promotion accompanied by a slogan that reminded people of an infamous torturer’s callous remarks about a student democracy demonstrator he had murdered in the 1980s — saying, “I tapped the table and he died” — was enough to bring down the collective wrath of the Korean people. Starbucks Korea apologized, the CEO was fired and the controversy reignited a broader discussion about collective memory, historical trauma and the boundaries of humor. This controversy offers a reminder that history does not fade at the same pace for everyone. What may have appeared to marketers as a clever promotional theme involving military tanks was interpreted by many South Koreans as an unforgivable reference to a painful chapter of modern Korean hi

1d agoBy Jason Lim
How dare coffee?!
Guest Columns

The right to be alone and the right not to be abandoned

Korea has become remarkably good at making daily life convenient. Food delivery arrives within minutes. Parcels arrive almost before we order. Banking, hospital appointments, shopping and government documents can all be handled on a phone. This convenience is one achievement of Korean urban life, yet in one of the world’s most digitally connected societies, a person can pass through an entire day without speaking to anyone. That is why Seoul’s effort to treat loneliness as a public issue deserves attention. Loneliness should not be dismissed as a personal weakness, a family failure or a private matter that individuals must solve alone. In today’s Korea, it has become part of the social condition itself. In 2024, South Korea had 8.045 million single-person households, accounting for 36.1 percent of all households. Living alone is no longer unusual. It has become one of the country’s most common ways of life. There are many reasons for this change: late marriage, not marrying at all, divorce, aging, migration for work or study, high housing costs and changing ideas about family and

2d agoBy Shin Go-eun
The right to be alone and the right not to be abandoned
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