One Argument for the FTA

In a futile effort to help Korea point out the positives of the FTA I want to point out two stories in today’s papers.

First, poisonous produce. Chosun’s take:

Large concentrations of lead and cadmium have been detected in agricultural goods grown near closed mines….In the case of rice…lead and cadmium concentrations were above the safe level in 27 percent and 8 percent of 757 cases tested. In the case of cabbage…27.5 percent and 28.1 percent out of 367 tested cases contained higher-than-permitted concentrations of lead and cadmium. Some 1,08 million sq. m of land was found to be unsafe for growing rice and cabbage…Up to 38 percent of potatoes, sweet potatoes, spinach, green onions, corn and radishes tested also had unsafe lead and cadmium levels. The test also found other heavy metals including arsenic, copper and mercury but in a permissible concentrations.

That overviews the problem, but who’s idea was it in the first place. The JoongAng:

Since 1980, the government has been implementing a project to protect towns near the closed mines from being contaminated by heavy metals spilled out from the mines, spending 210.5 billion won ($220 million). The measures included setting up walls around the mines and removing the sources of contamination.

“Because the project was separately conducted by each ministry, the work was not very efficient and professional,” said Ahn Cheol-sik, an official at the Ministry of Commerce, Industry and Energy.

So in other words the government thought it best to press land not suited for agriculture into service. In part, you can argue, due to the artificial prices given to these products because of the tariffs.

In addition to poisoned food, we have general corruption, form the Dong-A:

The police disclosed a scandal involving the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry officials who received bribes for government awards from related manufacturers or subsidiary institutes.

Consumers bought high-priced products selected by these officials, trusting they were high-quality ones.

Now we have improperly labeled food achieved through bribery. Again one can argue such skullduggery would not nearly pay off so well if food prices were not so artificially high due to tariffs. Further, because of the restrictions consumers have little choice but to trust, or not trust, a labeling process which is now proven to be sold to the highest bidder.

While I will not make the statement that an FTA would solve the problems immediately or make them disappear for good, I will say that if consumers are given more alternatives and price points they will have an positive impact in alleviating these problems.

8 Comments

  1. michael
    Posted September 6, 2006 at 5:41 pm | Permalink

    So we’re paying too much for produce that is killing us? Great.

    The weasals at the Chosun downplay the poison in their editorial: “We must stop cadmium rice and lead cabbage leading to a full-fledged food panic. Every year we see new food scandals: dumplings made of waste, parasite eggs in kimchi, carcinogenic dyes in pickled vegetables. In the end, it often turns out to have been much ado about nothing. If the alarm about heavy metal contamination has been exaggerated and causes a needless scare, farmers will suffer immediately.”

    In every instance the reported contamination was verified, so its an uncharacteristically chickenshit way for the Chosun to deal with an extremely serious issue.

  2. seouldout
    Posted September 6, 2006 at 7:52 pm | Permalink

    Sadly the Daehan News doesn’t exist anymore to explain that though Korean food is dangerous, foreign is more dangerouser. Before every movie there would be a rally-’round-the-flag Daehan segment exposing foreign stuff, such as Cornflakes containing nails, bugs and shards of glass. I’d howl with laughter; the rest of the audience would shriek in horror. Propaganda ain’t like it used to be.

  3. Posted September 6, 2006 at 7:54 pm | Permalink

    Not really. Korea’s trade barriers enable the SKY overlords to really live it up at the expense of their inferiors — Korea’s hoi polloi. The Chosun is part of that class of overlords. Why would they louse it up for the old gang? Chaebol families and their loyal retainers (bujang, chajang, kwajang, etc.) at the big companies demand (and get) to be treated like royalty, while the masses fawning over their power. Meanwhile those hicks in Bentonville sit on folding chairs and use a piece of plywood for a desk in order to drive consumer prices ever lower. Do you think Jay-Yong Lee wants to sit on a folding chair? Do the minor princes of chaebol group companies want to work at a piece of plywood? What about the slush funds? Wal-Mart has no slush funds. That’s why the Chosun recoils from the obvious conclusions. This is a country where a worthless peckerhead like Chung Dong-Young gets to be Minister of Whatever because he went to a SKY school 30 years ago.

  4. austin
    Posted September 6, 2006 at 9:55 pm | Permalink

    Since living in Korea my health has definitely suffered. Apparently this is also true of many other expats in Korea. The worst ear infections ever, coughs and lung infections that won’t go away. It’s damm hard to be healthy in Korea, lousy air, poor quality and damm expensive food. To top it off nutritional supplements and or herbs are hard to get and expensive. Watch Koreans walking up subway stairs in Seoul, slow and lethargic.

  5. michael
    Posted September 6, 2006 at 10:14 pm | Permalink

    Well, Mr. Carr, I wasn’t expecting Upton Sinclair, but the “let them eat tainted mandu, err, cake” attitude of the editorial really stood out. Feckin’ Confusionism and sajangs….

  6. slim
    Posted September 7, 2006 at 4:48 am | Permalink

    No wonder so (apparently) many Koreans reject capitalism. They are on the receiving end of its most rapacious, robber-baron form.

  7. bluejives
    Posted September 7, 2006 at 6:03 am | Permalink

    If the FTA flops, you can bet your bottom dollar that the lawyers screwed it up, just like they screwed up healthcare and everything else.

  8. Posted September 7, 2006 at 6:08 am | Permalink

    Looks like there’s lots of material in those articles for the next Bong Joon-ho horror flick. As the perpetrators are Korean, however, I guess it won’t happen. Not sexy enough.

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