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JENNIFER MOORE
The Chaebol and their Role During the Growth, Crisis, and Restructuring of South Korea
Introduction
1960GDP: $ 2.36 billion
2013GDP: $ 1.305 trillion
GDP per capita PPP: $ 32,798
Introduction
Purpose
To understand the chaebol’s role in the emergence of the Korean economy, its contributions to the financial crisis in
1997, and the subsequent restructuring that ensued as a result.
Chaebol Structure
Three Business Traits:1. Composition of many subsidiaries branching out into
a multitude of varied industries 2. Ownership and control is placed solely on a single
family of blood relation3. National income in disproportionately composed
largely of business group revenue
Management style is based on FARS, which is a system in which upmost importance is placed on the relationships with:
FamilyAlumniRegionState
Corporate Governance
Defined as how an enterprise distributes ownership and control within their company
Unique to the chaebol is autocratic control of the firm by the family with very little shareholding Interlocking and cross shareholding
SOURCE: Murillo, David & Sung, Yun-dal. (2013). Understanding Korean Capitalism: Chaebols and their Corporate Governance. ESADEgeo-Center for Global Economy and Geo-Politics
Three View Points of the Chaebol’s Role
1. Korea, INC.2. Crony-capitalism
3. Symbiosis
Korea, INC.
{ Government holds the majority of power in directing business }
Evidence for this view: Creation of the Economic Planning Board Excessive government subsidization of select chaebols Development of the notion of government backed
loans Lead to problems when government allows firms to
default
Crony-Capitalism
{ Usurpation by firms of the government for personal gains }
Evidence for this view: Change in chaebol-state relationship in 80’s Liberalization of financial sector Popularity of non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs) Instances of fraud, rent-seeking, and moral hazard
The chaebol problem
Symbiosis
{ The state and chaebol benefiting through usage of each other }
Evidence for this view: Previous two views to simple of an explanation Four founding rules of Park
1. Support of entrepreneurs with history of risky behavior2. Built a structure that catered to oligopolistic competition3. Heavily subsidized resources4. Limited political involvement of business
Monthly Export Promotion Meeting Businessmen directly able to influence direction of policy
Financial Crisis 1997
Contributing Factors: General structural deficiencies Market dominance by a few chaebols Reliance on debt financing Excessive chaebol diversification Reliance on government guaranteed loans Poor corporate governance
Restructuring the Korean Economy
Broad Reforms in these Areas: Dissolution of non performing loans (NPLs) Reorganization of company management of both
conglomerates and banks More supervision and oversight regulation in both the
private and public sector Failing firms and financial institutions were liquidated Reorganization of corporate governance Opened country to more foreign direct investment
(FDI)
IMF Action
Conditioned aid on the following reform initiatives: Reforms in the financial and corporate sectors, the
trade and capital account, and the labor market Provisions for a bill creating an agency to oversee the
liquidation and rehabilitation of financial institutions Greater financial transparency Fast track resolutions for NPLs Allowance for foreign entry Trade liberalization Stop to subsidized support of corporate bailout Reduction in debt/equity ratio
Concluding Remarks
The role chaebols played was rather large in the emergence of the economy as well as in the causes of the crisis, and therefore were central to a lot of the reforms that occurred after.
Despite their being 3 views on the role the chaebol played, I think it is more appropriate to consider them all being applicable, just after different times through the economy’s history.
Q/A