2010년 8월 11일 수요일

Kids G20 event


Schoolchildren representing G20 countries and wearing traditional costumes attend the Kids G20 Global Camp hosted by the International Vaccine Institute (IVI) at Hyundai Sungwoo Resort in Hoengseong, Gangwon Province, Tuesday. More than 300 children from 18 welfare centers are taking part in the three-day program designed to promote helping others, which ends today. South Korea will host the G20 summit in November.

The G-20 Agenda: Looking to Seoul

In the wake of the 2008 global financial crisis, the G-20 assumed a leadership role in addressing financial economic issues. This newly-empowered group helped give political backing to global efforts, many of them centered on the IMF, to arrest the crisis, to secure a durable recovery, and subsequently to deliver strong, sustainable and balanced growth.
We can look back over this short period to some significant accomplishments made possible through the cooperation of G-20 members, working together and with key multilateral institutions such as the IMF. Examples include the massive 2009 coordinated fiscal stimulus, the tripling of Fund resources—including new support for the poorest countries—and the strengthening of the global financial safety net through such innovations as the IMF’s Flexible Credit Line (FCL). These results demonstrated in high relief the potential gains from strong international collaboration.
Of course, some wondered whether G-20 members’ willingness to work together—that was so effective during the crisis—would fade away as the recovery arrived and challenges became more complex. The early evidence is that the cooperative spirit has endured.
Of course, cooperation requires persistence and commitment. In several areas, the seeds have been sown for ongoing dialogue and cooperation, even if countries’ diverse circumstances call for distinct policies in response.
With the accomplishments of the London and Pittsburgh Summits behind us, and with Toronto effectively looking toward Seoul for results across many fronts, the focus is turning to Korea—not just for concrete decisions, but also to demonstrate that the spirit of effective collaboration endures.
Thus, both expectations and risks are high, but so too is thepotential for success, and for a lasting legacy to be created.
Korea’s Role
Since becoming G-20 Chair, Korea has taken its responsibilities forward with impressive ambition and professionalism, evidencing a strong commitment to multilateralism and to the Asian region.
This was evident last week in Seoul, when I attended the G-20 Sherpas meeting, as part of the preparations for the November Seoul Leader’s Summit.
Already, these efforts are beginning to pay off. The G-20 has added political momentum to reform efforts currently underway in the IMF and elsewhere. Many complex issues have moved forward, including: coordinating exit policies, strengthening the global financial safety net, implementing the Framework for strong, sustainable and balanced growth, and reforming IMF governance. These and other issues are on the G-20 agenda—and they also will be a key focus for the IMF in the months ahead.

Chair of the G20 Korea Coordinating Committee Sakong Il explains to Invest Korea Journal what hosting the G20 Summit means for the country and her future leadership role


What is the overall significance of Korea hosting the G20 Summit in November and how do you expect the Summit to affect Korea's position on the global stage? 

As you are aware, the G20 is a group of 20 most economically influential countries in the world. Moreover, the G20 is supposed to assume the role of informal global steering committee for economic and financial affairs of the world. That said, it is certainly a historical event for Korea to chair and host the G20 Summit. 

In light of the scope of the G20 Seoul Summit, it is a daunting challenge for Korea. The Korean government, more specifically the Presidential Committee for the G20 Summit, is making every effort to make the Seoul Summit another success and is working in collaboration with other G20 member countries, all major multilateral institutions -- including the IMF, World Bank, Financial Stability Forum (FSB), the OECD and the World Trade Organization (WTO) -- as well as leading global think tanks. If Korea exerts her leadership in producing deliverables and implementable measures for the global economy, respect for the country's leadership stature on the global stage will rise. I should mention that the outcome of the Seoul Summit is significant not only for Korea, but also for the G20 process itself. 

How was Korea chosen as host of the 2010 G20 Summit? 

I would single out three critical factors involved for the choice. First, it is President Lee Myung-Bak's leadership exerted at the previous summits and on various occasions. For example, President Lee proposed a standstill on protectionism at the first G20 Summit in Washington D.C. which is considered to be one of the most important achievements of the G20 so far. 

Welcome to Korea, the first Asian country to chair the G20 Summit

Welcome to Korea, the first Asian country to chair the G20 Summit, where the vibrant, beautiful nature and world-class cuisine will sweep you off your feet! As a rising tourist destination of the East, Korea is a country of mountains, stunning landscape and four delightful seasons. Surrounded by seas on three sides, Korea has approximately 3,200 small and big islands and 350 beaches, offering tourists an endless range of adventures. We look forward to greeting you here in November!

G20 ambassadors, Ji-sung Park and Yu-na Kim, recently filmed the promotional video for the G20 Seoul Summit 2010.

Korea offers 20 places for G20 participants to visit



As the host and chair of the G20 Summit slated for this November, Korea looks to recommend 20 of the best rural places where foreigners must visit to see the nation’s most attractive scenery and well-preserved traditional culture.

The Ministry for Food, Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (MIFFAF) said on Tuesday that it will launch the Rural 20 supporters program, which will continue from Aug. 11 through November. 

Under the initiative, the ministry will invite a total of 2,100 foreigners to the 20 best rural areas across the country over the next three months for the verbal marketing. 

``After picking the 20 best places, we have commissioned a pilot run with around 200 expatriates here. The responses were great ― they said that they saw the true scenery of Korea,’’ MIFFAF official Ha Jee-eun said. 

``After finishing the tour, we believe the participants will market the rural areas via word of mouth. Then an increasing number of foreigners will learn about the sites and visit them.’’

Generals learn from corporate management

Army generals are rolling up their sleeves to learn the merits of corporate management in efforts to improve the military culture, which critics have decried for its inflexibility, bureaucratic inertia and lackluster communication. 

A total of 35 generals, including Army Chief of Staff Gen. Hwang Eui-don, visited an educational facility and an R&D center of LG Electronics during their two-day workshop, which ended Wednesday, to study corporate management and operational strategies focusing on efficiency, creativity, flexibility and practicality.

In the wake of the March sinking of the corvette Cheonan, calls have been mounting for the military to be overhauled as its handling of the tragedy revealed a series of shortcomings that could impede its future advancement.

“The workshop is the first of its kind since the establishment of the armed forces. We are here to adopt the latest business mind and the culture of communication from private enterprise striving to pursue change and innovation,” Hwang told reporters at the company’s facility in Pyeongtaek, Gyeonggi Province, Tuesday.

“The generals playing a key role in making military policy decisions will be able to expand their horizons and improve their communication skills. We hope that this will serve as a chance to break the frame of the rigid thinking and apply the corporate creative and practical perspectives to the military management.”

Participating generals paid close attention to lectures delivered by some of the LG executives, seeking useful tips for their military personnel management.

“What is the most crucial in the troop management is the relationship with the soldiers. Today’s lecture on labor-management relations will be of great help,” Major Gen. Yun Sang-don, head of the Army Intelligence School.

Underscoring that an enterprise will perish should it not change, LG executives said that the military could learn the enterprise’s relentless pursuit of change and innovation to survive in fierce market competition.

Hyundai Heavy executive to head Hyundai Oilbank

Hyundai Heavy Industries on Wednesday appointed executive vice president Kwon Oh-gab as the president of Hyundai Oilbank, the nation’s fourth largest refiner.

Kwon first joined Hyundai Heavy in 1978 and has served in a number of key positions including domestic sales and exports. 

The nomination was announced shortly after a two-year dispute over the management control of the refiner between Hyundai Heavy and Abu Dhabi’s state-run International Petroleum Investment Co.

Portfolio diversity puts Samsung on stable base

The extensive portfolio of Samsung Electronics has forced it into playing a delicate balancing act, both rivaling and partnering with Apple, Sony, HTC and other makers of digital gadgets.

Samsung, the world’s largest technology company, produces mobile phones, computers, TVs and MP3 players, and supplies their key components, from chips to display panels. 

Diversity of a level not seen in any other companies is cited as a key factor that ensures its stable income stream. But Samsung often finds itself in a dilemma due to complicated business ties. 

Samsung recently had to spurn calls from HTC to supply AM-OLED displays. Samsung is said to have run short of the much-touted display panel, which is also featured in its Galaxy S smartphones. The Taiwanese handset maker said that it would not use AM-OLED displays in some of its smartphone models.

HTC is one of the major customers for Samsung displays, but the company is its chief rival in the smartphone market. Samsung is aggressively boosting its Android-based smartphone Galaxy S in a bid to challenge HTC as the flag bearer for the Android camp. 

Samsung is increasingly facing such conflicting choices as it boosts sales of its handsets, TVs and other consumer electronics, increasing competition with its key clients for components. Samsung is the top supplier of panels and displays, as well as the top TV maker and No.2 handset vendor. 

Samsung’s business structure of making both parts and components has caused tension with its “frenemies” including Sony and Apple.

Hyundai Development aims to be leading global developer

Korean construction companies are striving to expand their global business and diversify project portfolios, as a priority of their growth strategies.  

Hyundai Development Company, the country’s leading developer in housing, civil works and urban development, is venturing into new sectors such as plant construction, renewable energy and resources development. 

The contractor has launched its new business plan, Vision 2016, with the catchphrase “Takeoff and Growth through Change and Innovation.” It seeks to drive “organized growth” by intensifying its presence overseas while differentiating customer value. 

Established in 1976, Hyundai Development has implemented multiple major civil works throughout the country.  

Its business sphere ranges from the construction of roads, highways, bridges, railways, subways, harbors, power plants to environmental plants, playing important roles in projects such as construction of national expressways including Gyeongbu, Jungbu and Seoul Circular.


 

LG eyes over 5m smartphones

LG Electronics aims to sell more than 5 million units of smartphones this year, as part of its efforts to turn around its ailing handset business. 
“We aim to sell more than 5 million units of smartphones this year,” an LG spokesperson said, adding that the handset vendor has already sold around 1.2 million units of smartphones in the first half. 

The Korea Times reported on Wednesday that the world’s No.3 handset maker targets 6 million units of smartphone sales this year, citing a high-ranking executive. Around 70 percent of its smartphones sold will be based on Google’s Android operating system, while the remaining 20 percent will be powered by Microsoft’s Windows Mobile, the report said. 

It remains to be seen whether LG would be able to achieve its smartphone target given its late entry into the market and intensifying competition. 

LG plans to release its flagship smartphone Optimus One With Google only at the end of the third quarter, whereas its rivals have already flooded the market with their new smartphone models. 

Its poor smartphone line-up has taken a huge toll on the Korean handset giant, with its handset business swinging to a loss in the second quarter. 

While focusing more on smartphones, LG plans to reduce its heavy reliance on feature phones, which give slim margins.

The Korea Times reported that LG plans to halve the number of its phone models to 70 this year, adding that the company may cut its sales target for its handsets from the current 140 million units. 

The LG spokesperson said his company has no plan to lower its handset sales target for now. 

Meanwhile, LG’s cross-town rival Samsung Electronics eyes 18 million units of smartphone sales including 10 million units of Galaxy S and Wave smartphones. Galaxy S is based on the Android operating system, while Wave runs on Samsung’s proprietary operating system Bada. 

Despite ranking second and third in the total handset market, Samsung and LG are struggling in the smartphone segment. 

Nokia topped the global smartphone market in the second quarter, followed by Research In Motion, Apple and HTC, according to data from IDC. Samsung placed a fifth, while LG failed to make the top five list.


KT to buy BC Card stake from Shinhan

Credit card company Shinhan Card said Tuesday it plans to sell a 14.9 percent stake of BC Card to the country’s No. 2 mobile carrier KT Corp. 

The share sale plan, confirmed by a Shinhan official, is based on the condition that Woori Bank successfully completes a transfer of 20 percent of BC Card to KT – a deal currently in the works. 

KT is to become the largest shareholder of BC Card if it manages to seal both deals, and it plans to use the card firms’ communication networks to expand its mobile transaction business on smartphones. 

“Shinhan plans to transfer its BC stake to KT once Woori completes its sale to the telecom operator,” said a Shinhan Financial Group official. Shinhan acquired its BC stake when the company merged with Chohung Bank back in 2006. 

“Shinhan doesn’t necessarily have to hold on to BC because we already have our own credit-card business.” Despite BC’s disappointing earnings results for the second quarter, with a net loss of 48.9 billion won, its payment network is expected to boost KT’s expansion into the telecom-credit card convergence business in a bid to overtake SK Telecom Co., its rival. 

The largest shareholder of BC Card currently is Bogo Fund with a 30.68 percent stake.

“The final amount of shares to be sold and sale price have yet to be determined,” the Shinhan Financial official said.

Shinhan’s plan on the sale of BC Card stake follows Woori’s announcement on the plans to sell a 20 percent stake out of its total 27.65 percent interest in BC Card to KT by the end of this year.

“Transfer of Woori’s share will be sealed at the board meeting soon. As for the deal with Shinhan, the decision to sale isn’t yet finalized although we have strong interest in management of BC,” a KT official said.

“KT will consider buying more of BC interest held by other 11 banks in the country. The deal with Woori is likely to be done by the year-end,” he said. 

[Korea-Japan 100 years on ]Bilateral economic ties: achievements and challenges

Dotted by luxury shops and department stores, Myeong-dong is the most popular hangout for Japanese tourists in Seoul.

Streets are lined with signboards in Japanese. Clerks hail shoppers in the language. At department stores, high-tech products from Korea and Japan compete for shoppers’ attention.

The shopping area of Seoul is a snapshot of the economic relations between the two neighbors, closely intertwined but fiercely competitive. 

A hundred years ago, Korea, then an impoverished, agricultural society, became a colony of Japan, Asia’s first country to embrace Western modernism. Korea was liberated in 1945 as the result of Japan’s defeat in World War II. Relations were virtually severed for two decades until they restored diplomatic ties in 1965. 

Despite historical fissures, economic ties grew exponentially thanks to geographical and cultural closeness, as well as mutually complementary industrial structures. 

Bilateral trade surged to $71.1 billion last year from a paltry $220 million in 1965. Korea is now Japan’s third-largest trading partner and Japan is Korea’s second largest. 

Their economic ties since 1965 can be divided into three periods, characterized by rapid expansion of industrial and economic exchanges (1965-1980), deepening trade imbalances (1981-1993) and comparative stagnation in ties (1994-now), according to Lee Bu-hyung of the Hyundai Research Institute.

Google in battle over privacy protection

Google’s high-flying Street View service faces tough scrutiny over privacy violation here. 

Police raided its Korean branch office Tuesday and will look into information stored in seized computer hard disks to figure out what kind of personal information was gathered while Google prepared to launch its Street View program here. 

Claiming that Google violated the country’s law on protection of telecommunication privacy, Google officials will be summoned after examining the data, said police authorities.

Many reports said Google may have had access to unencrypted e-mail, video downloads and any digital information passing through wireless routes in multiple locations.

“The police did not ask for any data or information from Google before paying us the very first surprise visit on Tuesday,” an official representing Google Korea told The Korea Herald a day after the raid on Wednesday. “We’re planning to fully cooperate with the police.”

The process, however, is not expected to pick up speed as Google Korea has already pointed out the data involving the controversial program is currently available at the company’s headquarters in California.

It now remains to be seen whether local police authorities will make further moves to have Google turn over data from the company’s overseas headquarters.

The Street View program features real-time photos of searched locations, allowing users to zoom, rotate and pan through street level photos of cities around the world, according to Google.

The images of cities in Korea were being collected since October until Google acknowledged months afterwards that it had “accidentally” picked up private information while filming streets with its camera-equipped cars.

What what was controversial was that Google got its hands on sensitive private information from the unencrypted wireless networks which were a part of the filming process.

The event, however, is not the first time that Google Korea has come contact with local government officials.

The global giant has been working with the state telecom and media regulator Korea Communications Commission since May.

The two sides were most recently discussing how the KCC could have access to the contents of Google’s gathered data.

“The two options were online sharing of the data and possibly visiting the California-based headquarters,” according to a KCC official.

The police, however, said it will continue with the investigation even if KCC and Google settle the matter.

Google has been experiencing difficulties with its Street View program in many countries, including Germany, Italy, Canada and Australia as they have claimed government-level inquiries must be conducted for possible breaches of data security laws.

On Tuesday, Google announced that it would launch the Street View program by this year in 20 cities in Germany, putting an end to the privacy row there.

But Germans will be able make a request to block out their homes on Street View ahead of the launch.

Lee Soo-man is richest stock investor among entertainers

Lee Soo-man, chairman of top talent agency and record label SM Entertainment, firmly holds the title of the Korean entertainment scene’s richest stock investor, with his stock wealth amounting to more than 60 billion won ($51 million), datashowed Wednesday. 

According to chaebul.com, an online financial information provider, the former singer’s stockholding is valued at 61.7 billion won as of Aug. 10, increasing more than 200 percent this year. 

Agency sues “Elf Girl” for going AWOL



An entertainment agency in Korea said it has filed a lawsuit against Han Jang-hee, also known as “Elf Girl,” for her absence-without-leave just before the 2010 World Cup in June when the company needed her most.

MC Entertainment is seeking 500 million won ($430,000) in compensation for Han’s “unfair” termination of activities as a member of a female duo Foxy, and for the fabrication of her “Elf Girl” photo without notifying the agency, company officials said.

N.K. power elite ready for successor

 While its military keeps South Korea on alert by firing coastal artillery, North Korea’s power elite is taking steps to make official the status of Kim Jong-un as the country’s next Dear Leader.

The dynastical succession from his father Kim Jong-il comes with a number of formalities and propaganda as the reclusive nation is technically run by the Workers’ Party.

The Workers’ Party is expected to put 26-year-old Jong-un and his supporters on key posts at the upcoming meeting of its top representatives in early September. 

Having been chosen as Kim Jong-il’s successor early last year, Jong-un began to take part in the country’s domestic and international policies in the second half of 2009.

The young heir began running the country’s secret police agency, which oversees and therefore controls the country’s power elite, according to Cheong Seong-chang, senior fellow of the inter-Korean relations studies program at Sejong Institute.

“As the successor, Jong-un was given extralegal authority as the country’s No. 2 in command of the Workers’ Party and the military last year,” Cheong said.

“From the summer of 2009, all official reports made to Kim Jong-il went through Jong-un.”

Cheong predicted that the Workers’ Party representatives will appoint to the party’s key positions Jong-un and others who will help him tighten his grip on the country’s military and the whole society.

The North said it will convene a meeting of party representatives to elect members of the party’s “supreme leadership,” which means the party’s Central Committee.

“One of the posts Jong-un could assume is the organizational secretary of the party’s Central Committee, who wields the greatest power on the committee,” Cheong said.

           Jang Song-thaek                             Kim Young-choon                          O Kuk-ryol
         Woo Dong-cheuk                            Joo Sang-song                                 Kim Jong-gak

Records show annexation treaty invalid

Historical documents showed that the treaty that put Korea under Japan’s colonial rule 100 years ago was invalid under international law as the Korean king didn’t use the state seal to proclaim it.

The original copy of the Korean proclamation of the annexation treaty on Aug. 29, 1910, contained only King Sunjong’s privy seal, which was used solely for administrative approvals, and didn’t have the state seal of Korea.

The Japanese edict of the same treaty, however, was stamped with the state seal and had the signature of Emperor Meiji, who signed it with his personal name, Mutsuhito, according to the document.

This discrepancy challenges the Japanese assertion that the annexation took effect legally with the approval of King Sunjong.