Xlibris Corporation
Home FAQs About Xlibris Contact Us



Home Bookstore Book Display

 November 19, 2008

 Author's
 Lounge


 Bookstore
 Home

   Book Display
     Author Display
     Contact Author

 Search

 Browse

 Bookstore
 FAQs

Korea: the Hard WayBattling Invisible Trade Barriers - A story from the Front Lines of America's Trade War

Korea: the Hard Way

  by Frank J. Kiska
  ISBN13: 978-1-4010-8780-7 (Trade Paperback)
  ISBN: 1-4010-8780-9 (Trade Paperback)
  Pages: 147
  Subject: CURRENT EVENTS / International

Availability
Paperback prices reflect 15% discount off retail
Hardback prices reflect 10% discount off retail

Trade Paperback  $17.84

 

Description

Manufacturing has declined to only 17% of our GDP as more and more American employees see their jobs being sent overseas. Our politicians, economists and journalists try to explain it away as a “drift” towards the transfer of manufacturing technology. Are we really “drifting” into a post-industrial society? Hard evidence suggests otherwise.

The Korean technique is to first force incoming American companies into joint ventures with local Korean companies and then “strip” the technology over time. Along with our technology go good paying American jobs and eventually our middle class.

"Korea: the Hard Way" is a story about one of the first foreign companies to slip “through the cracks” and achieve 100% foreign owned status. A story from the author’s unique experiences negotiating a minefield of invisible, and some not so invisible, non-tariff trade barriers used by a bureaucracy trying to push us into a joint venture with a local company.

Since there was no local partner to take care of the “dark side” of doing business in Korea, Frank was drawn into doing business “Korean style” and deal with “under the table” land contracts, inflated construction receipts, falsifying business scope, corruption, bribery, setting up phony shell companies, money laundering, tax avoidance and more.

Not satisfied with recent progress opening the notoriously difficult Korean automobile market, Frank hopes that “Korea: the Hard Way” will be a call to arms for the American consumer to help correct the situation in a way that is sure to be heard all the way back in Seoul.


Click here to read an excerpt from the book.





 
| | | | |