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[Civil Peace Forum] China’s Strategy on the Korean Peninsula at a Time of Great Transition

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[Civil Peace Forum] China’s Strategy on the Korean Peninsula at a Time of Great Transition

익명 (미확인) | 화, 2018/10/23- 17:33

China’s Strategy on the Korean Peninsula at a Time of Great Transition: Changes and Tasks

 

 

 

October 2018

Lee Nam-joo / Professor, Department of Chinese Studies, Sungkonghoe University

 

 

 

1. After Economic Reform, China Shifts to Maintaining Status Quo on the Korean Peninsula

 

Prior to the economic reforms of the late 1980s, the Chinese government strategy regarding the Korean Peninsula was centered on maintaining ties with the North, with the dual objectives of containing American influence and easing Soviet pressure on China. During this period, Beijing saw South Korea mainly as an enemy and as a simple forward base for the United States, which China saw as expanding its sphere of influence in Asia against China’s interests.

 

The Chinese view of the Korean Peninsula began to transform in February 1972, when Mao Zedong and Richard Nixon held their historic summit, agreeing to develop strategic and cooperative relations between their countries. This strategic cooperation lessened China’s fear of the possible military role that the US Army stationed in South Korea would play. Moreover, its own interest in preventing escalations on the Korean Peninsula became clearer, if only so China could maintain its new relations with the US. Although the Chinese state refused to jettison its rhetoric in support of North Korea’s ambitions for unification of the peninsula, Chinese policymakers began to work at ensuring stability of the two separate Korean states, thus beginning the desire to maintain the status quo on the peninsula. Given its alliance with North Korea, however, China took care to avoid being too overt about its desires to improve relations with the South and of keep things as they were on the peninsula.

 

The sweeping economic reforms that began in China in 1978, however, made it necessary for Beijing to begin improving economic relations with South Korea despite objections from Pyongyang. This was because, first, the paramount objective of China’s foreign policy at the time was to cultivate an international environment favorable to its reforms, which raised the importance of relations with South Korea. Second, Beijing was eager to attract economic and financial resources from abroad to ensure the success of its reforms, and the potential that South Korea would become an important investment and trading partner was promising. Channels of indirect trade with China were established by the early 1980s, with an increasing volume of civilian and non-political exchanges between China and other countries. Until the end of the 1980s, though, Beijing took care to confine relations with South Korea to economic and cultural areas of activity only, out of respect for its ally in Pyongyang.

 

Nevertheless, the growing volume of economic and cultural exchanges between China and South Korea inevitably led to increasing political exchanges. The watershed moment in the two nation’s partnership came with the fall of the Soviet empire. The collapse of socialism and the Cold War order led South Korea to enter into new diplomatic relations with Russia and other countries in the former Eastern Bloc. China could not sit idly by as the world was developing in a whole new direction both politically and economically. Even North Korea joined the South in becoming a member state of the United Nations (UN) in 1991, creating the conditions for China to take its relations with the South to the next level.

 

Economic factors were at the top of Chinese statemen’s minds when China officially opened diplomatic channels with South Korea in August 1992. The fall of Socialism in the Eastern Bloc quickly raised official Chinese fear of the security of its own regime. The country was still reeling from the fallout of the Tiananmen Square crisis that had unfolded in 1989. These changing circumstances conspired together to raise demands, within the communist party, to strengthen control not only over politics, but also to strengthen the planned economy policy. Deng Xiaoping, however, was convinced that there was no way out for the Chinese socialist system except through economic reform, the acceleration of which Deng began to advocate in 1991.  This emphasis was clarified to party officials and the general public during his last official activity, involving a series of trips throughout the southern region of China in early 1992. The communist party responded by officially adopting the idea of a socialist market economy and raised the pace of liberalization, reform, and economic growth. Party officials did their best to ensure the success of their new doctrine, as their future crucially depended on it. It was against this backdrop that Beijing officially entered diplomatic relations with Seoul, confirming to the rest of the world that it sought to pursue its national interests by keeping intact the separate status of the two Koreas and the presence of the US Army in South Korea rather than promoting radical transformation on the peninsula. In some respects, this switch in policy amounted to tacit acknowledgment of continued US leadership over international order in Northeast Asia. However, China’s new strategy regarding the peninsula also betrayed the country’s desire to strengthen its influence over inter-Korean relations in the long run, as it would now be the only major nation with official ties to both Pyongyang and Seoul. History since then has helped China achieve its aspirations to a certain extent. Its relations with South Korea have strengthened both economically and politically, and the South is now as important to China as the United States. While China-North Korea relations souring quickly in the immediate aftermath of the former opening diplomatic relations with the South, they have been improving since Kim Yeong-nam, then chair of the Standing Committee of the Supreme People’s Council of North Korea, visited Beijing in June 1999, followed by another visit from Kim Jong-il himself in May 2000. The fact that the six-party talks on resolving the North Korean nuclear issue took place in China indicates that nation’s increased influence on peninsular affairs. The Chinese strategy on the Koreas, however, soon faced a dilemma. 

 

2. North Korea’s Nuclear Ambitions and China’s Strategic Dilemma

 

China’s strategy of maintaining the status quo on the Korean Peninsula had a fatal defect. It compelled North Korea into diplomatic isolation, raising fears in Pyongyang over the security of the Kim regime. The state of affairs on the Korean Peninsula would have turned out quite differently had the new China-South Korea partnership been accompanied by action to allay fears over regime security among Pyongyang policymakers, such as through the establishment of a peace regime on the peninsula and the development of new relations between North Korea and the United States. China, however, went ahead with establishing diplomatic relations with the South without preparing such action for the sake of its ally. This has had the effect of leading South Korean and American policymakers to wait for regime collapse in North Korea rather than maintaining dialogue with Pyongyang.  North Korea’s isolation from the rest of the world deepened in the 1990s through the so-called Arduous March. 

Having awakened to the fact that China no longer guaranteed the security of its regime, Pyongyang leaned toward an even more extreme and hawkish line of self-defense, ultimately embracing the development of a nuclear arsenal. North Korea’s relations with China seemed to improve from 1999 not because the two countries shared the same ideology and strategic goals, but because they had overlapping geopolitical interests. China could not ignore the remaining value of North Korea as a buffer against the expanding sphere of American influence. North Korea could not afford to jettison its relations with China, one of the very few countries on earth capable of providing it political and economic support. Although the two countries maintained and improved their relations out of such practical necessities, deep-seated mistrust remained on both sides, but especially in North Korea. China’s new Korean Peninsula strategy, in other words, weakened the “traditional friendly relations” between Beijing and Pyongyang and replaced them with a practical partnership. 

 

North Korea’s mistrust of its larger neighbor is evident in the fact that it has continued to develop nuclear weaponry and missile systems despite China’s explicit warnings. Pyongyang did so as it seemed the only card it could play in a very skewed game. North Korea, in other words, viewed nuclear weapons not only as leverage for negotiations with Washington on the security of the Kim regime, but as security collateral for the regime. In the early days, Pyongyang’s policymakers appear to have viewed the nuclear card more as a negotiating instrument. The second nuclear crisis of 2002 and 2003, in particular, involved North Korea trying to force some compromises from Washington by broadcasting its still-too-early nuclear development. The negotiations that followed in the form of six-party talks culminated in the Joint Declaration of September 19, 2005. While the six-party talks were in progress, Pyongyang did agree that denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula was one of the chief objectives of the talks, so the conflict between China and North Korea remained below the surface. China insisted on three principles—peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula, denuclearization of the peninsula, and dialogue as the way to find solutions—as the basis for resolving the nuclear issue. These three principles, at least in theory, went hand in hand. Beijing’s utmost interest, nonetheless, was in maintaining status quo on the peninsula in the name of “peace and stability.” 

 

As the September 19 Declaration was thwarted in execution, however, things began to change. With antagonism against Washington reaching new peaks, Pyongyang plunged headlong into upgrading its nuclear capacity, aiming at the possession of a well-equipped nuclear arsenal as one of the core national objectives. Shortly after he succeeded his deceased father in 2013, Kim Jong-un made it the official policy of his regime to pursue “the simultaneous development of the economy and the nuclear arsenal.” Beijing watched in horror as Pyongyang’s attempts to strengthen its nuclear and missile systems continued to increase volatility on the Korean Peninsula and in the rest of Northeast Asia. While Beijing also wanted the Kim regime to remain intact in Pyongyang, this was not desired at the cost of having nuclear weapons so close by.

 

Even more serious was the fact that it became increasingly difficult for China to maintain the status quo on the Korean Peninsula. North Korea continued to advocate nuclear armament, repeating nuclear and missile tests and honing its capacity to strike the US mainland. As the United States and South Korea increased their military readiness, the Korean Peninsula seemed about to become a powder keg. The Chinese government sought to exert control over the problem, with Foreign Minister Wang Yi calling for the “simultaneous cessation” of North Korea’s nuclear and missile activities and joint ROK-US military exercises, and “simultaneous development” of both denuclearization and a peace regime on the Korean Peninsula. Military tensions, however, continued to escalate until late in 2017. The three principles China had insisted on were increasingly seen as unrealistic. It was, instead, forced to choose between stability and denuclearization. The inauguration of Xi Jinping accompanied the return of the denuclearization process to China’s strategy for the peninsula, with Chinese policymakers now stressing the need to stop North Korea from completing its nuclear weapons and missile program. Accordingly, China more actively endorsed international sanctions against the North, even imposing its own on tourism and other sectors. Beijing hoped that these mounting pressures would put North Korea onto the path of denuclearization and restoring stable relations with the United States. As North Korea directly acted against this desire, it represented a great strategic defeat for China.

 

First, sanctions against North Korea unsurprisingly worsened China’s relations with the country. Song Tao, a high-level communist party official who visited Pyongyang in November 2017 as President Xi’s special envoy, was forced to return home without gaining access to Kim Jong-un. On November 29, 2017, shortly after Song’s return, North Korea successfully tested its intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) launch capabilities, declaring it as the completion of its nuclear arsenal plans. Second, the United States and South Korea went ahead with deployment of the US Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system, which China condemned as a serious threat to its strategic interests. China found itself compelled to take retaliatory actions against South Korea, even if that would mean the destruction of the ties it had long taken effort to cultivate. Third, the United States began to move to keep China in check. In its National Security Strategy Report, released in December 2017, the Trump administration officially labeled China as a “revisionist” state, along with Russia, and a competitor to the United States.  The report disappointed Beijing, which had proposed earlier to the US that the two great countries should make new efforts to foster better relations. By 2018, the United States began to criticize China on a variety of issues, including trade and cross-Strait relations. As China had set up sanctions against North Korea mainly in the hopes of improving and strengthening relations with the United States, the Trump administration’s denouncements represented a direct affront and embarrassment. 

 

The decisive blow to China was the fact that, while it was acting in good faith in imposing sanctions against North Korea (mainly out of its own interest in building good relations with the United States), the United States chose to alienate China from the dialogue with North Korea. The expression “China passing” may be more rhetorical than substantial, but it does reflect the increasing worries China has about the possible diminishing of its influence over the Korean Peninsula now that the state of affairs there has changed so rapidly.

 

What put China in the back seat? The fatal mistake was in its underestimating the likelihood that the Trump administration would enter into direct negotiations with Pyongyang. China may have thought it was a significant mediator between Washington and Pyongyang due to the great mutual distrust between them, but it underestimated the growing incentives, particularly for the United States, to engage Pyongyang in direct dialogue now that its nuclear and missile development programs had progressed so far. If Washington decided to talk directly to Pyongyang, it now needed no intermediaries. The three-party and six-party talks of the past occurred only because the US administrations of the past were reluctant to talk to the Kim regime face to face. Although China desperately wanted to maintain the status quo on the Korean Peninsula, it failed to eliminate factors that made this desire impossible to satisfy. While China, on the surface, emphasized the need to guarantee the security of the Kim regime in North Korea as part of resolving the Korean question and denuclearization, it failed to show either the will or the ability to change the international situations that increasingly forced North Korea into isolation. As the North set out to ensure the security of the regime with its nuclear card, China was forced instead to choose which side it would be on—with the United States or North Korea. How, then, should China escape this dilemma? 

 

3. Transition on the Korean Peninsula and China’s New Strategy

 

The fear of “China passing” subsided after Kim Jong-un visited China three times to meet President Xi. Relations between the two nations are improving again, with preparations underway for Xi to visit Pyongyang. At the third summit with Kim on June 19, 2018, Xi mentioned “three unchanging principles” underlying China-North Korea relations: commitment of the Chinese communist party and government to maintaining good relations with North Korea irrespective of changes in surrounding international circumstances; the goodwill of the Chinese people toward the people of North Korea; and China’s unwavering support for “socialist North Korea.” The last emphasis on “socialist North Korea” seems to signify China’s willingness to actively cooperate in efforts to ensure the security of the Kim regime.

 

These changes give us the impression that China and North Korea have restored at least some of the strategic partnership they enjoyed during the Cold War era. Words and protocols exchanged between the two countries surpass those expected of “normal interstate relations”. China is making use of these improving relations to re-exert influence on the Korean Peninsula. It may be too early yet to say it now has a completely new strategy regarding the two Koreas, as Beijing is still reluctant to strengthen its ties to Pyongyang to the extent that would make South Korea or the United States uncomfortable.

 

It is unlikely that improving China-North Korea relations will affect South Korea adversely. Seoul does not regard such relations as a threat to the peacebuilding process it is contemplating for the Korean Peninsula. Brief discomfort was in the picture over who should count as “parties” to the declaration of the end of the Korean War, with Beijing criticizing the South Korean government’s move to declare the end of war between North Korea and the United States only. While Beijing insisted that its participation in the peace agreement was crucial to ensure the effectiveness of the new peace process on the Korean Peninsula, it also evinced an openness toward a three-party declaration of the end of the Korean War insofar as such a declaration could effectively contribute to peace on the peninsula.  South Korea’s foreign minister, Kang Kyung-wha, also mentioned in August that, while the South Korean government pushed for the three-party declaration in an attempt to rush the commencement of the peace process on the peninsula, a four-party declaration with China as one of the parties was still a viable option. Should China, however, approach the declaration not as a primer for promoting the peace process, but as an instrument with which it could compete against the United States for greater influence, things could become quite difficult.

 

The improving relations between China and North Korea are exerting quite complex effects on China’s relations with the United States. Beijing is still hopeful that the Trump administration’s aggression toward China will wane after the midterm elections in the United States. This means that Beijing is unlikely to use its partnership with Pyongyang as leverage against Washington. As its relations with North Korea began to improve as the latter embraced the objective of denuclearization, China would be wise to emphasize the role it played in inducing change in North Korea’s attitude. Pyongyang, too, will not resume its nuclear or missile tests insofar as neither Washington nor Seoul provokes it to do so.

 

President Trump, nonetheless, continues to complain about China’s influence on North Korea. This is in part because his administration is worried that improving relations with China will strengthen the North’s leverage in negotiations, and also in part because such outward complaints serve as a warning against North Korea to prevent it from slacking off in regards to denuclearization due to its presumed support from China. However, the recent delays in US-North Korea negotiations are more reflective of the mistrust that remains between the two countries than China’s deliberate meddling. All relations involved, therefore, will be determined by the direction that US-North Korea negotiations take in the coming months and years.

 

Now that the state of affairs on the Korean Peninsula remains so fluid, China is unlikely to shift its strategy radically. Improving relations with North Korea is one of the strategic cards that China has to play as it seeks to enhance its role and influence in effecting positive change on the peninsula by defusing the nuclear crisis. Once the denuclearization process is well established and conditions are set for a new status quo on the peninsula, China will be able to maintain stability there while strengthening relations with both Koreas.

 

Circumstances, however, may not turn out for the best as far as China is concerned. The state of affairs on the peninsula could become volatile again, presenting the same dilemma. China’s conflict with the US could also escalate to new heights, with the latter launching new offensives against it on the economic, political, and military fronts. Such a situation may well compel China to prioritize relations with the North above the South and actively use the North Korea card in its negotiations with the United States. Beijing, however, does not want the Cold War rift to return to the Korean Peninsula or Northeast Asia. These tricky situations can be avoided only when a new order is securely established on the Korean Peninsula through elimination of all the factors that contribute to disorder, including the ceasefire state, hostility between Pyongyang and Washington, and the arms race between the two Koreas. “Perpetual peace mechanism” has been given as the name of this new envisioned order since the Joint Declaration of September 19, 2005. Although China has at least verbally endorsed this vision of a new order, it remains uncertain to what extent the country is willing to help Koreans achieve that order. The recent transition in the state of affairs in the region, however, has convinced Chinese policymakers of their nation’s stake in outgrowing the status quo focus of its strategy on the Korean Peninsula. Now it remains to be seen how China will respond.

 

 

* This essay is the fourth essay written for the 2018 Peace Report Project of the Civil Peace Forum, under the sponsorship of Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung Korea Office. 

 
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국민참여재판 웹자보

기자회견에서 구호 외치면 불법집회? 국민참여재판에서 판단받는다

국회 앞 세월호 기자회견 참석, 집시법 제11조 적용 기소돼 

일시 장소 : 9. 25. (월) 09:30, 서울남부지방법원 406호 법정

 

기자회견 중 구호를 외쳤다고 집시법을 적용해 처벌할 수 있을까요? 이에 대해 처음으로 국민참여재판을 통해  유무죄 여부를 판단받게 되었습니다. 9/25(월) 오전 9시 30분부터 서울남부지방법원 406호 법정에서 국회 앞 기자회견에 참석했다가 집시법 위반으로 기소된 피고인들에 대한 국민참여재판이 열립니다.


피고인들은 2016. 3. 8. 오후 2시30분 국회 담장 앞 인도에서 세월호 유가족들과 함께 세월호 특별법 개정안과 특검의결요청 처리를 촉구하는 기자회견에 참석하였습니다. 40여 명의 참가자들은 언론에 보도될 것을 기대하며 발언, 삭발식, 기자회견문 낭독 등의 순서를 진행했습니다. 그런데 기자회견 도중 기자 앞에서 기자회견의 핵심 메시지를 압축적으로 표현하는 구호를 외치자 경찰은 경고방송과 채증을 시작하였고, 이후 이들은 집시법 위반으로 기소되었습니다. 집시법 제11조에서 국회의사당 경계지점 100미터 이내 옥외집회를 금지하고 있는데 국회 앞에서 기자회견을 빙자해 집회를 했다는 것이었습니다.     
그 동안 경찰은 기자회견 진행 도중 짧게 한 두 차례 구호를 외치기만 해도 불법집회로 변질되었다며 해산명령을 내리고 집시법을 적용해 수사했습니다. 법원도 기자회견에서 플래카드나 피켓, 마이크를 준비하고 구호를 제창하였다면 불특정 다수가 들을 수 있는 상태에서 대외적으로 의사표명을 했기 때문에 집시법의 적용을 받는 집회로 판단하여  유죄로 판결하곤 했습니다. 수사기관과 법원이 기자회견조차 자의적이고 형식적인 기준을 적용해  처벌한다는  비판이 많았지만 쉽게 바뀌지 않았습니다. 피고인들과 변호인들은 국민의 합리적인 상식과 법감정이 반영될 수 있는 국민참여재판을 통해 기존의 잘못된 관행과 선례에 변화를 시도하고자 지난 5월 국민참여재판을 신청하였습니다.  


이번 국민참여재판에서는, 기자회견 중 플래카드와 피켓을 들거나 구호를 일시적으로 외쳤다는 이유로 집시법상 집회로 판단해야 하는지 여부, 국회의 기능이나 안전을 해칠 가능성이 전혀 없는 경우에도 처벌해야 하는지 여부 등이 쟁점이 될 전망입니다. 당일 기자회견 현장에 있었던 채증요원과 경비계 경위 등이 검찰 측 증인으로, 당일 기자회견을 취재하였던 언론사 기자가 피고인 측 증인으로 출석할 예정입니다. 

 

이번 국민참여재판은 참여연대 공익법센터의 김선휴 변호사, 김진영 변호사, 현지현 변호사(법무법인 덕수), 민주노총 법률원의 김세희 변호사가 공동으로 변호합니다. 참여연대 공익법센터는 이번 국민참여재판을 공익변론하며 시민들의 방청과 관심을 요청 하고 있습니다.  

 

문의 :  김선휴 간사(참여연대 공익법센터, 02-723-0666)

 

[원문보기/다운로드]


 

목, 2017/09/21- 14:08
231
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이럴줄몰랐지013_01이럴줄몰랐지013_02

그림. 소복이 

혼자서 살다가 짝궁과 살다가 아기까지 셋이 사는 이 생활이 어리둥절한 만화가 입니다.

목, 2017/07/27- 14:28
230
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공정위의 통신3사 통신요금  담합 조사,
뒤늦었지만 너무나 당연한 조치

철저한 조사로 통신재벌 3사 독과점으로 인한 폐해를 걷어내고
담합과 폭리 제거해 통신서비스의 공공성 회복해야
실제로 통신3사의 데이터전용요금제, 스마트폰요금제 거의 똑같아

 

참여연대 민생희망본부(본부장 : 조형수 변호사)는 올해 5월 18일 통신3사의 데이터중심요금제 가격 담합 의혹에 대하여 공정위에 신고했습니다.(별첨1 참조) 공정위는 6월 27일에 회신을 보내며 통신3사의 요금이 동일∙유사하다는 점만에 근거하여 사업자들이 담합을 한 것으로 곧바로 인정하기는 곤란하다며 앞으로 다각도로 확인해보겠다는 입장을 밝혔습니다.(별첨2 참조) 그후 공정위가 오늘 통신3사 조사에 착수했습니다. 참여연대 민생희망본부는 공정위가 이제라도 조사에 착수한 것에 대하여 뒤늦었지만 너무나도 당연한 조치라고 평가합니다. 


데이터중심요금제 중에서 데이터 300MB를 제공하는 요금제 가격이 32,890원(SKT는 32,900)원으로 매우 유사하고 데이터 무제한을 제공하는 요금제는 65,890원으로 동일하다는 점은 담합이 아니고선 이해할 수 없는 가격 책정입니다. 발표시점 또한 KT가 2015년 5월 8일, LGu+가 5월 14일, SKT가 5월 19일로 매우 인접한 시기에 발표했습니다. 요금제 설계에 오랜 시간이 걸린다는 것을 감안하면 매우 의아한 일이었습니다. 그뿐만 아니라 통신3사의 스마트폰 서비스의 주요 요금제가 완전히 똑같습니다. 이 역시 통신3사의 담합이 아니라면 불가능한 일일 것입니다.(통신3사의 2G와 3G 표준요금제의 경우, 음성통화료는 초당 1.98원, 영상통화료는  초당 3.3원으로 같고, 문자메세지 요금도 건당 22원으로 같음. 심지어 데이터 통화료는 0.5KB당 0.275원으로 소수점 세 자리까지 동일함)


공정위는 철저한 조사로 통신3사가 요금제 설정에 공모와 담합이 있었던 것은 아닌지, 또 그러한 담합과 공모를 바탕해서 시장지배저 지위를 남용하고 폭리를 취해온 것은 아닌지 이참에 엄정히 파헤쳐야 할 것입니다. 국민들은 현재 통신3사가 과점을 하고 있기 때문에 통신사간의 경쟁이 거의 존재하지 않는 상태에서 매우 좁은 선택의 폭을 강요당하고 있고, 이같은 상황을 빌미로 해서  통신3사로부터 폭리를 당하고 있다고 해도 과언이 아닐 것입니다.  공정위는 이같은 부당한 상황을 반드시 타개하고, 통신서비스 시장의 건전한 질서 회복 및 통신공공성을 제고하는 데 앞장서야 할 것입니다. 끝.
 

▣ 붙임1 : 통신3사의 데이터중심요금제 비교표

SKT

KT

LGu+

요금(원)

데이터 제공

요금(원)

데이터 제공

요금(원)

데이터 제공

32,900

300MB

32,890

300MB

32,890

300MB

39,600

1.2GB

38,390

1GB

39,490

1.3GB

46,200

2.2GB

43,890

2GB

46,090

2.3GB

51,700

3.5GB

49,390

3GB

51,590

3.6GB

56,100

6.5GB

54,890

6GB

55,990

6.6GB

65,890

무제한

65,890

무제한

65,890

무제한

75,900

무제한

76,890

무제한

74,800

무제한

88,000

무제한

87,890

무제한

 

 

110,000

무제한

109,890

무제한

 

 

*출처 : 2017.05.12. 기준, 각사 홈페이지

 

▣ 붙임2 : 참여연대의 통신서비스 관련  소송 및 공정위 신고내역

 

▣ 별첨
1 : 2017.05.18. 데이터중심요금제 및 기본료 문제 담합-폭리 의혹등 공정위 신고(클릭)
2 : 2017.06.29. 통신3사 데이터요금제 담합 신고 결과 공개(클릭)

 

논평 [원문보기/다운로드]

수, 2017/08/09- 17:32
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 종부세법 개정해, 자산불평등 해소해야

「종합부동산세법 개정안」 발의 환영 기자회견

 

일시·장소 : 1월 23일 (화) 오전10시40분, 국회 정론관

 

취지와 목적

  • 피케티(2014) 이후 전세계적으로 자산불평등을 해소해야 한다는 주장이 화두로 떠올랐으나, 현재 한국 사회의 제도는 부의 양극화를 완화시키는 데 전혀 기여하지 못하고 있습니다. 참여정부는 다주택자에 대한 과세를 강화하기 위한 목적으로 종합부동산세를 도입했으나, MB정부를 거치며 종합부동산세의 세율과 과세 대상이 크게 축소되면서 다주택자에 대한 누진적 과세의 기능이 유명무실합니다.

  • 이와 같이 제 기능을 잃은 종합부동산세를 다시 강화하기 위해 세율을 높여 다주택자에 대한 누진적 과세 기능을 실현하는 한편, 공정시장가액비율을 폐지하여 불공정한 과세 체계를 바로잡기 위해, 박주민 의원이 「종합부동산세법 개정안(2011462)」을 발의한바, 시민사회가 이를 환영하며 종합부동산세의 강화를 요구하는 기자회견을 개최합니다.

 

 

기자회견 개요

  • 제목 : 자산불평등 해소와 조세정의 위해 종부세법 개정해야

  • 일시·장소 : 2018. 01. 23. (화) 오전10시40분 / 국회 정론관

  • 주최 : 더불어민주당 박주민 의원, 참여연대 조세재정개혁센터, 한국도시연구소, 나라살림연구소, 민변 민생경제위원회

  • 참가자

    • 법안 취지설명 및 사회 :  박주민 더불어민주당 국회의원

    • 발언① : 안진걸 참여연대 공동사무처장

    • 발언② : 이원호 한국도시연구소 책임연구원

  • 문의 : 홍정훈 참여연대 조세재정개혁센터 간사 (010-2059-1886)

화, 2018/01/23- 14:26
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