European,business,association in Yasni Exposé of Felix Abt

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Felix Abt, Director / Business Developer @ Companies in HK, BVI, VN and DPRK

Country: Viet Nam, Language: English
I offer: Expertise as multiple company director and investor, experience in developing and managing business on behalf of multinational corporations and small and medium-sized enterprises in mature and new markets, including North Korea and Vietnam. Abt has lived and worked in nine countries on three continents. - Further, experience in capacity development (e.g. as co-initiator and director of the first business school in, of all places, North Korea) and in lobbying (e.g. as initiator and president of the European Business Association, the first foreign chamber of commerce in North Korea). - Photos, mainly related to business activities, including an introduction to the North Korean olympic gold medalist on the profile photo, can be found here: www.flickr.com/photos/felix_abt/ - Author of the book "A Capitalist in North Korea: My Seven Years in the Hermit Kingdom"
Felix Abt @ Companies in HK, BVI, VN and DPRK

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Felix Abt - A Capitalist in North Korea” by Felix Abt | Leonid Petrov\u0026#39;s KOREA ...
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159 results for Felix Abt

A totally different perspective: Paperback "A Capitalist in North Korea: My Seven Years in the Hermit Kingdom" - on sale in 2014

The Paperback "A Capitalist in North Korea" - is on sale in 2014 and gives a fresh perspective of a country that has been depicted for the last sixty years by book authors and media as stuck in the past, unpredictable, threatening, horrific and crazy. - THIS BOOK is witness to a different, changing North Korea: "A Capitalist in North Korea: My Seven Years in the Hermit Kingdom is the tell-all memoir of Felix Abt, a Swiss entrepreneur who worked in the world's most isolated, often called "Stalinist" fortress, for the last decade. Abt offers in-depth portraits of the thrills, adventures, hurdles and even accusations of spying while working behind the world's very last Iron Curtain. He finds a side of North Korea that is far from sinister—one that has been lost in the flood of accounts from defectors, journalists, activists, and politicians who have pummeled the nation into isolation. - The author was privileged to have been granted wide access to the hermit kingdom where he visited seven out of nine provinces and more than two dozen cities, interviewing hundreds of high-ranking communist officials and ordinary North Koreans. He became a figurehead in bringing capitalism to North Korea through all sorts of whimsical and unexpected projects: the Pyongyang Business School, the European Business Association in Pyongyang, and ventures in pharmaceuticals, precious metal extraction, and bottled water. - Did you know, for instance, that plastic surgery and South Korean drama shows are all the rage among the women of Pyongyang? That the capital offers a line-up of decent hamburger joints? That young North Koreans are eagerly signing up for business courses in preparation for market reforms? And that United Nations sanctions are the biggest obstacle to doing legitimate business in the DPRK? With more than 200 photographs taken by the author, A Capitalist in North Korea offers an account of the unknown aspects of North Korea, looking beyond tales of famine and suffering." - The e-book has been sold by Amazon since the end of 2012. - The PAPERBACK will be out before summer 2014. The new book cover was designed by the publishers. ORDER IT AT AMAZON OR HERE: http://www.tuttlepublishing.com/authors/abt-f elix/a-capitalist-in-north-korea-hardcover-wi th-jacket - Read the author's updated stories and comments on his Facebook page. And thanks for liking the page and for your feedback :-) here: www.facebook.com/ACapitalistInNorthKorea -
Felix Abt
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flickr.com 2014-01-07  +  

How a Promising Project Brought Good Business Practices to North Korea - by Felix Abt

Swiss businessman Felix Abt discusses how a promising reform project (Pyongyang Business School) brought good business practices to the world's most isolated country.
Felix Abt
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38north.org 2013-12-17  +  

Swiss businessman Felix Abt « SINO-NK

Posts about Swiss businessman Felix Abt written by Adam Cathcart.
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sinonk.com 2013-11-24  +  

Felix Abt | 38 North: Informed Analysis of North Korea

North Korea Out of the Dark: The Story of the Pyongyang Business School. How a promising reform project brought good business practices to ...
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38north.org 2012-12-30  +  

DPRK Business Monthly Volume III, No.10 « CanKor

Felix Abt helped found the Pyongyang Business School, the European Business Association of Pyongyang (a de facto Chamber of Commerce) ...
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vtncankor.wordpress.com 2012-12-30  +  

MNC SME strengths weaknesses - Large companies are stifled by ...

By Felix Abt, entrepreneur, business developer and consultant . Already at the end of the 1980s,
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ideamarketers.com 2012-12-23  +  

Sixty Years of Failed Sanctions | FPIF - Foreign Policy In ...

Felix Abt, a Swiss businessman running a pharmaceutical company in North Korea during the mid-2000s, was unable to receive certain chemicals for his business and
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fpif.org 2012-12-23  +  

Foreign Citizen in DPRK - Soviet-Empire.com U.S.S.R.

There is a businessman named Felix Abt who runs company Nosotek and Pyongsu JV (A pharmaceutical company) and even runs a business school there.
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soviet-empire.com 2012-12-23  +  

North Korea – doing business in a demanding environment

Felix Abt has been working in. Pyongyang for seven years, ...
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nkeconwatch.com 2012-12-23  +  

RBC - Russia's leading business magazine (www.magazine.rbc.ru) publishes in its November 2011 edition another article written by Felix Abt

Large companies are stifled by their sluggishness and why small-sized companies enjoy their size advantages - The article gives answers to the following question: "Over the last decades, the number of takeovers and mergers worldwide has dramatically increased. Karl Marx appears to have foreseen this development with his capital accumulation theory. But are large companies more productive, efficient and successful than small or medium-sized enterprises, as the architects of major enterprises claim?" It further explains the strengths of SMEs and how large companies can acquire "SME-strengths", too. - Continued in the article in Russian language. - At the request of visitors to this web page the complete English version of the article is now published here: http://tinyurl.com/d92g2j3
Felix Abt
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yasni 2011-11-07  +  

Invalid URL: North Korea: The Country That Never Pays You Back

25.06.2012 - Financial Gamble. A few years back Felix Abt a Swiss entrepreneur doing business in North Korea discovered one of the unintended
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minyanville.com 2012-12-23  +  

Invalid URL: The complete guide to Vietnam's holiday paradise Nha Trang

Felix Abt and friends have just launched www.nha-trang.travel which gives complete and objective travel information as well as many useful tips for travelers interested in discovering Vietnam's most famous seaside resort-town and its most prominent scuba diving destination. The resort is also known for the best weather in Vietnam. It is bordered by beautiful mountains and an amazing, long beach along a bay impressively dotted by many scenic islands. - Also visit his wife Huong's business website: www.nha-huong.com
Felix Abt
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nha-trang.travel 2011-05-10  +  

Invalid URL: RBC - Russia's leading business magazine

Felix Abt wrote an article for RBC, published in its May 2011 edition, about: Doing Business with Asians. - Why you are at a disadvantage when dealing with strategically sharpened Asian minds and what you need to know to avoid ending up as a loser. - U.S. foreign minister Henry Kissinger was one of the most cunning Machiavellian Western politicians of the 20th century. When he became aware of the strategies the late Chinese Prime Minister Zhou Enlai employed to him, Zhou complimented him by saying, “You are very smart!”. Kissinger replied, “You mean smart for an American” - or any other non-Asian for that matter. In fact, whereas Westerners and other non-Asians are used to handling all kinds of situations by means of intuition and reasoning, Chinese and other East Asians apply formalized strategic thinking in competitive situations among themselves - and over non-Asians through which they gain superiority over their ignorant and naïve rivals. - Continued in the article in Russian language, here: http://magazine.rbc.ru/2011/05/01/trends/5629 49980358808.shtml
Felix Abt
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magazine.rbc.ru 2011-05-16  +  

Invalid URL: 财经 (Caijing), China's leading business newspaper, analyzes North Korea, the state of and the need for reforms

Caijing, which The Wall Street Journal called "The Leading Finance Publication in China" published on June 6, 2011, the article 朝鲜“体制外改革” ("North Korea 'without system reform'"). In its lengthy article China's influential business newspaper states "an urgent need for internal reform of North Korea to follow the trend of market forces". It also repeatedly quotes Felix Abt, both as a Swiss and as a Swedish businessman... - Caijing has just corrected the article by stripping Felix Abt of his Swedish citizenship while leaving his Swiss nationality untouched. Well done, Caijing!
Felix Abt
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magazine.caijing.com.cn 2011-06-09  +  

Sixty Years of Failed North Korea Sanctions by Christine Ahn ...

2010-08-20 [] - by Christine Ahn  Felix Abt, a Swiss businessman running a pharmaceutical company in North Korea during the mid-2000s, was unable to receive certain chemicals for his business and told Time magazine, "someday you may find out that some product or even a ...
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original.antiwar.com 2010-09-22  +  

Invalid URL: Can North Korea embrace Chinese-style reforms? - China ...

Will North Korea follow China's lead and open up its economy? The view from inside the ... Earlier this week, I interviewed Felix Abt, a German business consultant and the ...
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chinaeconomicreview.com 2010-10-28  1  

Invalid URL: South Korean Cartoonists Cry Foul at Simpsons Segment

2010-10-29T18:11:16 [TIME] - But Felix Abt, the former head of the European Business Association in Pyongyang, a de facto chamber of commerce, claims SEK still has overseas clients
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time.com 2010-11-01  +  

North Korea - the Hermit Emerges (The Daily Telegraph, London, 22.10.2010)

"There are a few hundred foreign-invested companies operating at the moment, mainly small ventures," says Felix Abt, a German who set up a pharmaceutical business in North Korea and also founded a de facto European Chamber of Commerce in Pyongyang. "The manufacturing of low and medium-end items is very competitive and North Korea is making everything from artificial flowers to furniture to false teeth. I was involved in drawing up the business plan for the false teeth venture and such products can be made at a much better profit margin than in the Philippines, for example." From the outside, North Korea appears to be the last truly closed country in the world, but for Mr Abt, "life is fairly normal and you can now get all the daily necessities". The only restriction, he says, is that "you cannot have private contact with the Koreans".
Felix Abt
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telegraph.co.uk 2010-09-22  +  

Kim Bowled for Murdoch's Dollars With Korean Games (Bloomberg, BusinessWeek, Sept. 7, 2010)

... Some practical bottlenecks still stand in the way of the North Korean information technology industry, Felix Abt, a co-founder of the European Business Association in Pyongyang, said in an e-mail. For the most part only foreign staff can use the Internet, “meaning that Korean project managers cannot deal directly and efficiently” with customers overseas, he said. ...
Felix Abt
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bloomberg.com 2010-09-22  +  

Analysis: Kim Jong Il, the reformer? North Korea is where Vietnam and China were before they started major market overhauls — Global Post, June 24, 2010

ANALYSIS: KIM JONG IL, THE REFORMER? — NORTH KOREA IS WHERE VIETNAM AND CHINA WERE BEFORE THEY STARTED MAJOR MARKET OVERHAULS. — By Bradley K. Martin — Special to GlobalPost, published: June 24, 2010 06:47 ET in Worldview — Now that food shortages reportedly have forced North Korea to reverse its crackdown on capitalist-style markets, more systematic reforms for its collapsed economy may not be far behind. The markets policy reversal came May 26 in directives issued by the cabinet and the ruling Workers’ Party to subordinate organizations, according to a report by the Seoul-based newsletter North Korea Today, which gets its information from officials and ordinary citizens inside the North. “The government cannot take any immediate measures” to relieve a food shortage that is “worse than expected,” the newsletter quoted one of the directives as saying in explanation for the policy change. The same authorities only late last year decreed a sudden currency revaluation that crippled the “anti-socialist” markets, where stallholders had been trading for individual profit, by confiscating the traders’ wealth. The new decrees bless and deregulate what’s left of the markets, which have shrunk and in some cases closed completely in the interim, in the hope that market trading will keep people from starving. And the directives instruct managers of state-run enterprises to pursue lucrative deals — especially in foreign trade — that could help feed their employees. This could all turn out to be the big event that finally pushes the very reluctant leadership into a multi-year campaign of serious reforms of the sort that began decades ago in Vietnam and China, according to Felix Abt, a Swiss involved in North Korean joint ventures in pharmaceutical manufacturing and computer software. “Given an industrial stock and an infrastructure beyond repair, and the impossible task of maintaining a huge army, economic reforms appear unavoidable in the very near future,” Abt, a former president of Pyongyang’s European Business Association, wrote in an email exchange. “It looks intriguing and it reminds me of Vietnam’s history of reforms,” said Abt, who did business for years in Vietnam before going to Pyongyang and recently has moved back to Vietnam while maintaining his involvement in North Korea. “The Vietnamese economic situation looked dire at the beginning of the 1980s,” he explained. “Nguyen Van Linh, party secretary in Ho Chi Minh City, favored moderate economic reforms. He tried too early, lost his job and left the political bureau in 1982. Le Duan, secretary general of the Communist Party, was categorically against any economic reforms. He died in 1986, the year of the five-year party congress which brought Nguyen Van Linh back and elected him as his successor. The new party secretary general immediately launched the Doi Moi policy — ‘reforms.’ ” Abt ventured the lesson that triggering reforms “takes something big like the death of a leading politician” in Vietnam — or, in North Korea, a “ruinous” currency revaluation. Not every foreigner who has had firsthand economic dealings with North Korea is convinced the recent events constitute that trigger. Some worry that U.S.-led sanctions could nip any flowering of capitalism in the bud. “The problem is still U.S. Treasury’s attitude,” said one such foreigner, who asked not to be identified further. Treasury Department officials began working several years ago to take North Korea “out of the international banking system,” discouraging trade, he noted. Some U.S.-sponsored sanctions subsequently were eased in an effort to persuade Kim Jong Il to negotiate away his nuclear weapons capability, but after those talks went nowhere — and especially after North Korea allegedly torpedoed a South Korean warship earlier this year — enthusiasm for compromise cooled. Recent reports say Washington is moving toward aggressively strangling cash flow into the country. There is also the argument that Kim believes he cannot afford to reform the economy because it would let in information and influences that would undermine his family’s rule by letting his isolated subjects learn that the rival South Korean system works much better. According to Abt, one answer to both concerns could be China, which “will provide all the support necessary to the DPRK party and government to enable economic reforms without regime change.” He used the abbreviation of Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, the country’s official name. “The DPRK may expect support from other quarters, for example, the European Union, too,” he said. “I think the dilemma of the leadership — economic upsurge versus the inflow of ‘subversive’ system-destabilizing information and ideas, particularly regarding the South — can be overcome with the necessary Chinese support,” Abt said. “Though the division of Korea can only be compared with that of Germany before 1990, China's division — capitalist Hong Kong, capitalist Taiwan — was a sort of challenge to Deng Xiaoping and successors, too, but they learnt to manage that quite well.” — Bradley K. Martin is the author of "Under the Loving Care of the Fatherly Leader: North Korea and the Kim Dynasty“ and a journalist covering Korea and other parts of Asia for three decades, among other things, for the Asia Wall Street Journal, Newsweek and Bloomberg.
Felix Abt
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globalpost.com 2010-06-25  +  

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Felix Abt @ Companies in HK, BVI, VN and DPRK
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