Are foreign workers a solution to Korea’s demographic challenge?
Meeting Korea’s demographic challenge requires a comprehensive strategy, including by making greater use of foreign workers.
Meeting Korea’s demographic challenge requires a comprehensive strategy, including by making greater use of foreign workers.
The August 18, 2023 summit at Camp David was rightly hailed as a breakthrough moment for Japan, South Korea, and the United States.
The “Spirit of Camp David” pledged that the three countries would make the Indo-Pacific “thriving, connected, resilient, stable, and secure.”
Although the vision outlined at Camp David has potential to advance U.S.-Japan-Korea objectives, there remain obstacles to its success.
U.S. trade policy with South Korea has already made its way into the 2024 Republican primary talking points.
The Camp David Summit marks the beginning of a new era and has implications far beyond security cooperation.
When the leaders of Japan and Korea join Biden at Camp David on August 18, it will cap a year of remarkable progress in improving relations.
Raising the fertility rate in Korea depends in part on improving the young’s economic position, which requires fundamental economic reforms.
The release of contaminated water from Fukushima will be a test of President Yoon’s political skills and improving Korea-Japan relations.
Recent remarks by China’s ambassador and Seoul’s have prompted strong and diverse reactions from media, politicians, and the Sinosphere.