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...Polo," he says. Unlike their parents, Kim and his peers pursue deals outside their immigrant communities; Drunknmunky works with partners in FUBU, the African-American-owned clothing line. Instead of hewing to production, most Korean-owned companies are now full package, offering everything from fabric to manufacturing to export for major American labels, says Bruce Berton of Los Angeles' Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandise (where half the students are second-or third-generation Korean Americans...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Entrepreneurs: Legacy of Dreams | 6/7/2004 | See Source »

...town over from Nishi-Kawaguchi, mosque chairman Raees Siddiqui, a 53-year-old Pakistani, is happy to chat about a possible backlash against Muslims due to the arrests, but he only has a few minutes: the 30-year resident of Japan, who runs a million-dollar used-car export business, says he has to be at the police station soon. No, he's not wanted for anything, or even questioning, he replies, simultaneously offended and amused at the suggestion. He requested the meeting with the police, he says, because he's concerned that the arrested men have already been convicted...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Japan's Terror Threat | 5/31/2004 | See Source »

...point is not to ignore threats, but rather to ignore fear, especially when fear itself becomes a threat to peace. Real strength also means finishing what you start—a call going unanswered in the deteriorating nation of Afghanistan. Our greatest success in Afghanistan is that its chief export is once again drugs instead of terrorism. The President, Hamid Karzai, is effectively the mayor of Kabul, beyond whose borders power lies in the hands of warlords and, increasingly, the Taliban. (Did you know the Taliban still exists?) The world knows that one of the best ways to evaluate strength...

Author: By Peter P.M. Buttigieg, | Title: The Liberal Art of Redefinition | 5/28/2004 | See Source »

...soft landing will be felt around the region. The mainland's 40% import surge in 2003 was the spark that ignited Asia's nascent cyclical rebound. When China slows down?as it likely will within months?a chill will settle over Japan, Asia's newest recovery story. Surging exports to China accounted for 32% of total Japanese-export growth in 2003. Japanese capital spending is also being driven in a significant way by capacity expansion in those industries trading with China. With annual private-consumption growth remaining anemic at about 1.5%, Japan has very little cushion against a falloff...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Recovery Is at Risk | 5/24/2004 | See Source »

...Other Asian countries are exposed, too. In South Korea, fully 36% of export growth in 2003 is traceable to sales into China. Given the postbubble travails of Korean consumers, a deterioration in a key source of external growth could have a major impact domestically. Dramatic effects can also be expected in Taiwan and Hong Kong?economies that have become appendages of the mainland's production platform. A slowdown in China puts all that at risk. Meanwhile, in America, the drumbeat grows louder for a shift in U.S. monetary policy, presaging higher borrowing costs. With the American economy surging...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Recovery Is at Risk | 5/24/2004 | See Source »

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