8 FDI As A Factor of Economic Restructuring: The Case of South Korea
8 FDI As A Factor of Economic Restructuring: The Case of South Korea
8 FDI As A Factor of Economic Restructuring: The Case of South Korea
Introduction
1
2 International trade, capital flows and economic development in East Asia
In a first section, the chapter briefly sketches the major features of the
Korean economic miracle, stressing the contribution of Government
interventions, and highlighting both the strengths and weaknesses of past
public policies. It also highlights the 1997 Asian financial crisis and its
implications for the Korean economy. The second and third sections
examine the role played respectively by inward and outward FDI in the
development of Korea, as well as the changes triggered by the recent
financial crisis and, more generally, by the changing environment. The
analysis is based on a thorough examination of policy provisions as well as
of FDI trends.
surpassed by electrical and electronics goods by the mid-1980s (see Figure 1).
The development of the Korean economy can be said to be unusual for
two reasons. First, because of its stellar export performances, which makes
it an exceptionally open economy (at least from the trade perspective). A
second feature is the relative importance of heavy and chemical industries
in the country’s evolution.
45
40
35
30
Textile and clothing
25
Electrical and electronics products
Agricultural products
20
15
10
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
trade zones and tariff exemptions for raw material imports earmarked for
exports. By contrast to what was observed in other countries, the mix of
import-substitution and export-promotion proved to be successful in Korea,
certainly thanks to the highly centralized structure of the Government
(Park, 1988).
• During the second period (1972-1981), export growth together with
industrial deepening were maintained as priorities. Korean authorities
wanted at the time to construct a self-supportive industrial structure based
on heavy and chemical industries. They thus decided to launch the Heavy
and Chemical Industry (HCI) drive, while reducing to some extent the
wide-ranging incentives hitherto accorded to exports. This strategy
imposed substantial costs on the economy. In particular, because the
Korean system of industrial targeting leaned more toward foreign
borrowing than FDI, the strategy led to a rapid increase in external debt
(Cho, 1994). The difficulties encountered with the implementation of the
HCI led to a new shift in the country’s industrial policy and the
Government started to opt for an indirect rather than a direct form of
control of the economy.
• The third period (1982-97) can be said to be a period of economic
liberalization and globalization (Chung and Wang, 2000). During this
period, the Government started to reduce its role in industrial planning and
targeting in order to promote competition in domestic markets. A first
round of privatization went hand in hand with various market opening
measures (with respect to imports as well as FDI). Overall, there was
certainly more progress in external liberalization than in internal
liberalization and the Government remained heavy-handed. In particular,
despite the official abandonment of targeted industrial policies, the
Government continued to act directly in the financial markets through the
Korea Development Bank, which provided long-term investment funds to
companies (Haggard and Mo, 2000).
1961, all commercial banks became in essence the property of the state and
were placed under the direct control of the Ministry of Finance. This law
enabled the Government to exert control over the allocation of credit, and
to tightly monitor its sectoral development - rewarding companies, which
fell in with its development strategy and punishing those, which did not.
Through this original form of planning and of credit allocation, the
Government set the objectives, which were realized by private firms
(Lanzarotti, 1992). As explained above, the Government provided
subsidies, financial assistance, and tax breaks to key industries to promote
exports and industrial upgrading.
A major consequence of the interventionist stance of the Korean
Government is the emergence of large industrial conglomerates, the
chaebols. This is a major difference with the other NIEs, in particular
Taiwan, and a major similarity with Japanese keiretsu (see Chapter 2). In
Korea, economic policy has had a clear tendency to emphasize scale
economies. For that matter, financial support was given to industries with a
certain minimum scale of efficient production, especially during the HCI
drive, thus fostering the expansion of large diversified conglomerates. By
the same token, as a means of promoting exports, the Government
established so-called General Trading Companies (GTCs), which were
modeled after a Japanese institution. The GTCs, which were usually
selected among the chaebols, were given special benefits and were in
charge of handling export business for other exporters as well as for
themselves. The creation of the chaebols system thus depended crucially on
Government’s intervention in the financial system.
One major consequence of the developmental state is the existence of a
close business-government relationship so characteristic of Korean chaebol
capitalism.
The 1997 Asian Financial Crisis and its Implications for the Korean Economy
Until 1997, Korea seemed an unqualified success story with very short
periods of economic slowdown. Yet some of the seeds of the current crisis
had been sown long before, in the form of institutional deficiencies and
policy mistakes. Such is the case for the practices in the banking sector as
well as the collusive relationships between the Government, and the
banking and the business communities. These cozy relationships together
with the tradition of high indebtedness in Korean conglomerates fuelled the
accumulation of imbalances and encouraged investment in excess
capacities and in non-profitable activities. This nature of the business-
6 International trade, capital flows and economic development in East Asia
Inward FDI
Inward FDI is one of the domains in which the Korean Government exerted
a large influence. By contrast to other high performing Asian economies,
Korea did not opt for a systematic promotion of inward FDI but chose a
more selective strategy. Yet FDI was clearly used as an instrument of
industrial policy. For instance, by targeting specific industries, the
Government definitely helped shape the Korean industrial structure.
Pre-crisis FDI
Trends During the first period which extended from the early-1960s to the
mid-1980s, FDI inflows were minimal. The real take-off occurred in the
second half of the 1980s (see Table 1 and Figure 2). FDI inflows rose from
$682 million over the period 1971-80 to $5080 million over the period
1981-90, a change comparable to what was observed in Colombia (OECD,
1995). After peaking in 1988, there was a brief setback in the early 1990s,
followed by a new surge in 1995.
K o r e a n In w a r d a n d O u t w a r d D i r e c t In v e s t m e n t , 1 9 7 6 - 2 0 0 1
U S $ B il l i o n Pe r cent
10 2 ,5 0 %
8 2 ,0 0 %
FD I OD I F D I/ G D P O D I /G D P
7
6 1 ,5 0 %
4 1 ,0 0 %
2 S o u rc e : B a n k o f K o re a 0 ,5 0 %
0 0 ,0 0 %
19 76 1 977 197 8 19 79 198 0 19 81 1 982 198 3 19 84 1 985 198 6 19 87 1 98 8 19 89 1 990 199 1 19 92 1 99 3 19 94 1 995 199 6 19 97 1 99 8 19 99 2 000 200 1
such as the chemical industry (26 per cent of total manufacturing FDI) or
the electrical and electronics industry (18 per cent). This pattern was
clearly the result of government policies rather than of locational
advantages in the form of cheap labor (Lanzarotti, 1992).
The impact of public policies could also be felt in the clear difference in
the orientation and form of FDI to be found in FTZs, and in the rest of the
country. In FTZs, MNEs tended to be concentrated in low-wage production
and to be 100 per cent foreign-owned, but such was not the case in the rest
of the economy where labor intensity and the level of foreign equity
participation were much lower. This is in sharp contrast with the traditional
view according to which all MNEs in Korea sought exclusively to take
advantage of cheap local labor.
While manufacturing was the largest recipient in the early period (64
per cent during 1962-86), the service sector eventually gained importance,
accounting for 60 per cent of total FDI in 1995 (see Table 3). FDI in the
service sector started exceeding FDI in manufacturing from 1994 (Hong,
1998). This change reflected the relaxation of restrictions to foreign
investors in this sector as well as the rise in the relative importance of these
activities in the Korean economy.
Within the manufacturing sector, the chemical industry was still
attracting a large share of inflows in the late-1980s, together with the
electrical and electronics sector, and the transport equipment industry. The
large role played by the chemical industry helped turn Korea into a net
exporter of chemical products, primarily to the rest of
12 International trade, capital flows and economic development in East Asia
Assessment
E le c t r o n i c s a n d e le c t r ic a l E q u ip m e n t : E x p o r t s , O D I a n d F D I , 1 9 6 1 - 2 0 0 0
S h a r e in to ta l e x p o r ts ( in p e r c e n t) S h a r e in to ta l O D I o r F D I F lo w s ( in p e r c e n t)
35 25
30
20
FDI
25
15
20
E x p o r ts
15
10
10 ODI
S o u r c e s : C H E L E M ( C E P II) , M O C IE , E X IM B a n k
0 0
1 9 6 1 -8 0 19 8 1-85 1 9 8 6 -9 0 1 9 9 1 -9 5 1 9 9 6 -2 0 0 0
such as radios (Hobday, 1995). As Figure 3 illustrates, the rise in the share
of FDI in the electronics and electrical equipment industry went hand in
hand with a rise in the share of exports of such products. Subsidiaries of
foreign semi-conductor firms certainly contributed to the emergence of
domestic firms as major players in the world market. In the late 1960s, a
number of American and Japanese MNCs established assembly and test
facilities in Korea, allowing Samsung and LG to enter the industry in the
1970s through joint-ventures with foreign producers, and become world
class semiconductor manufacturers (for a more detailed account, see Kim,
1999). Figure 3 also suggests that domestic firms must have taken over,
since exports of electronics and electrical goods continued to rise while
FDI in this sector dropped in relative terms.
In the electronics industry, fully foreign-owned FDI was restricted
although joint ventures were perceived favorably (Amsden, 1989).
Subsequently, MNEs were used by the Government mainly to further the
acquisition of technology by local firms and help them develop new
ownership advantages (Lall, 1996). In other words, FDI was not the major
engine of technological development, but it was used in such a way as to
strengthen the local technological capacities. During the first period, there
was no real problem of ownership because FDI helped develop local skills
and local firms.
There are a number of different channels through which positive
spillovers may affect a host economy. Linkages can be enhanced through
information and matchmaking, technological upgrading, training, and
financing. Various measures can encourage technology transfer from
foreign affiliates to their local suppliers and facilitate technological
upgrading. In Korea, technology transfer requirements to domestic firms
were used in the 1960s but were eventually discontinued as the measure
merely encouraged the transfer of obsolete technologies (UNCTAD, 2001).
Further measures can help bring suppliers and foreign affiliates together
and strengthen their linkages. They can be of a general nature or may be
more proactive through specific linkage promotion programs usually
focused on a limited number of industries and firms. In Korea, local
content requirements contributed to the development of supplier industries.
In addition, the 1984 Act on Fair Transactions and Subcontracting gave the
Government supervisory authority to monitor buyer-supplier transactions
(UNCTAD, 2001). In addition, foreign firms also contributed to
establishing supporting industries either by founding suppliers themselves
or by helping former employees to establish their start-up suppliers (Kim,
1999).
16 International trade, capital flows and economic development in East Asia
Post-crisis FDI
Trends Since the crisis broke, FDI flows into Korea have increased
sharply. This can be attributed to a combination of positive factors
including a substantial depreciation of the local currency and asset values,
an increased number of company offerings as a result of corporate
restructuring and privatization of state-owned companies, and a more
favorable investment environment as a result of the Government’s
deregulation and liberalization drive.
As Table 1 demonstrates, during the four years from 1998 to 2001, FDI
flows into Korea totaled more than $27 billion (BoP data), or $52 billion
(notification basis). A slowdown was however, observed in 2001 for the
first time since 1992 (or 1993, depending on the series), suggesting that the
post-crisis euphoria may be short-lived. It remains to be seen whether this
is a turning point resulting from the slowdown in corporate and financial
restructuring or simply the result of a temporarily less positive global
environment. The rising competition from China, as an alternative location
for FDI, is also perceived as a major matter of concern and a potential
cause of the observed slowdown. Yet the rebound observed in early 2002 is
an encouraging sign.
With respect to industrial distribution, although the service sector has
maintained a strong momentum, the manufacturing sector is still dominant.
As Table 3 illustrates, finance and insurance excel in the services sector,
while electric and electronics makes up the largest share among
manufacturing industries. This can be attributed to the Government’s will
to attract FDI to help maintain the competitiveness of these sectors. A good
example is the joint venture between Philips and LG Electronics in 1999.
The surge of FDI in manufacturing has been sustained since the crisis,
with rather contrasting evolutions across industries. FDI is no doubt
increasingly used as an instrument for restructuring. The government
ascribes the continuing robust nature of inbound capital to the recovery of
the international credibility of the Korean economy, the progress of its
ongoing corporate restructuring program, and the new environment of
opportunity in the investment regime created by the Foreign Investment
Promotion Act. According to a study by KPMG, foreign companies, which
initially exported to Korea through local agents or engaged in joint
ventures with local companies, were found to have expanded their FDI
during the crisis, probably because their Korean partners hoped to boost
their liquidity this way.
The rising share of the finance and insurance industries is related to the
strong progress in the restructuring of the financial sector and to the
Government’s easing of foreign investment restrictions in financial services
FDI as a factor of economic restructuring: The case of South Korea 19
Assessment
Expected benefits and potential risks The recent surge of FDI into Korea is
largely due to the more positive policy stance towards foreign investors.
Opening up the economy to FDI may serve different purposes. First, FDI is
a source of finance. Second, FDI can help firms streamline their activities.
Third, FDI can contribute to the restructuring process to the extent that the
presence of foreign firms can encourage the adoption of international best
practice and promote better corporate governance, in particular by reducing
the degree of public interventionism (Yun and Lee, 2001). In the case of
Korea, the rationale for attracting more FDI is to be found at the
microeconomic level rather than at the macroeconomic level.
The dramatic change in Korea’s policies and attitudes toward FDI will
definitely affect the way the Korean economy operates and interacts with
the rest of the world economy. In particular the lifting of a number of
restrictions on the participation of foreign firms will expose the chaebols to
fiercer competition, while enhancing a more transparent business
environment.
Of course, next to these opportunities, the surge of FDI may also
generate a number of risks. The first major concern is that domestic firms
may be acquired at low price (fire-sale). Second, is the fear of dominance
by foreigners (ownership issue). Third, is the potential for domestic
monopolies to be substituted by foreign monopolies.
Where does Korea stand? Despite the dramatic rise in FDI inflows, Korea
still does not attract a large amount of FDI relative to the size of its
economy and lags very much behind other comparable economies.
According to UNCTAD (2001), Korea is among under-performers in terms
of attracting FDI. In 2000, its proportion of FDI stock (on arrival basis) to
GDP was just 8.9 per cent, which is quite low compared to the average of
23.3 per cent in East Asia and 13.7 per cent for the world average. There is
thus still scope for further expansion of FDI if Korea is to reach the degree
of internationalization observed in comparable economies. An important
point to note is that the different capital inflows to Korea are now better
balanced, with non debt-creating flows now clearly dominant.
FDI as a factor of economic restructuring: The case of South Korea 21
Yet FDI inflows have no doubt already deeply affected the Korean
economy, and should continue to do so in the future, in the following way:
• FDI helped firms to survive while they were on the brink of collapse in
the wake of the crisis. When cash-rich companies took over ailing Korean
firms, hundreds of jobs that might otherwise have disappeared were
salvaged, not only at the firms concerned but also at their subcontractors
and suppliers. Critics may perceive some acquisitions negatively because
foreigners may acquire a large market share. This is probably the case for
the seeds industry, with Seminis controlling about 45 per cent of the
Korean vegetable seed market. But the important point is to compare the
current situation with the counterfactual. Acquisition by foreigners ensured
the survival of firms that would otherwise exit the market, and as a result
these acquisitions exert a competition-enhancing effect.
• Beyond this first short-term impact, major changes already took place
and reflect a real change of mindset. As FDI is expected to favor structural
change, a self-reinforcing mechanism may come into play through which
structural change stimulates FDI to Korea, and FDI to Korea accelerates
the speed of structural changes. As a result, the Korean economy is likely
to be increasingly in line with other OECD economies. Structural changes
include (i) changing the safety net mechanism in the financial system; (ii)
changes in corporate governance of Korean companies triggered by
changes in the financial system (increasing share of foreign equity holders,
hence a rise in the required rate of return for the firms, and a shift to the
globally accepted level playing field); (iii) recent focus on business
restructuring for the purpose of improving profitability; (iv) increasing
transparency of Korean companies as a result of reinforced disclosure
requirements; and (v) a series of deregulation initiatives lowering or
eliminating barriers to new entrants.
• As was the case in the past, FDI continues to make a significant
contribution to export growth. Research undertaken by KIET (2002)
suggests that exports of foreign manufacturing companies in Korea
accounted for about 15 per cent of the country’s total exports in 1999. The
trade surplus generated by these companies reached 20.3 per cent of
Korea’s total trade surplus. All this means that these firms’ contribution to
export performance is much larger than what their share of total production
would suggest (Korea Times 17.01.02). As one of the top-selling foreign
companies in Korea, Nokia (which became the 10th largest exporting
company in the country in 1999) more than doubled its exports of mobile
phones from 1995 to 1998 (to $1 billion) and again in 2000 (to $2.4
billion).
22 International trade, capital flows and economic development in East Asia
Outward FDI
Pre-crisis OFDI
Trends OFDI from Korea started in the late-1950s in the service sector
(with a mining company investing in New York real estate), in 1968 with a
forestry development project in Indonesia, and in 1974 in manufacturing.
Yet OFDI did not experience strong rates of growth until the second half of
the 1980s when Korea gradually gained economic clout (see Figure 2). The
total value of stock investment abroad rose from $0.65 billion in 1986 to
26 International trade, capital flows and economic development in East Asia
Assessment
30
10
ODI
25
E x p o r ts 8
20
15
FDI
4
10
2
5
S o u rc e s : C H E L E M ( C E P II) , M O C IE , E X IM B a n k
0 0
1 9 6 1 -8 0 1 9 8 1 -8 5 1 9 8 6 -9 0 1 9 9 1 -9 5 1 9 9 6 -2 0 0 0
Post-crisis OFDI
been closed down. In 2001, these negative flows totaled $1.3 billion,
leading to a sharp drop in the net total investments from $3.7 billion to $1.9
billion (Exim Bank, 2002).
New OFDI patterns Since the crisis, the share of the service sector has
been on the rise at the expense of manufacturing. While wholesale trade
and retail, as well as the real estate industry have been major beneficiaries
within the tertiary sector, textiles and clothing, as well as wood and
furniture or basic metal industries have been major victims of the drop in
the share of manufacturing OFDI. By contrast, electronics and telecom
equipment, and petroleum and chemicals proved resilient. Active overseas
investment in the R&D and software areas also account for the rise in the
share of the service industry in the recent period (Ha, 2002).
Also, the relative erosion in the weight of the chaebols may help reduce
the rivalry which fuelled some excessive investments in the past, and also
lead to a better balance between OFDI by the chaebols and by SMEs.
More importantly perhaps, there has been to a large extent a
geographical redistribution in OFDI, away from Asia, towards the US and
to some extent Europe. In fact, Europe managed to improve its position
mainly thanks to a large investment realized jointly by LG Electronics and
Philips in 2001. Within Europe, Central and Eastern European countries
such as Poland or Hungary loom large by contrast to Western European
countries, with the exception of the UK and the Netherlands. The drop in
the share of Asia needs to be qualified however. First, in terms of accepted
investments, Asia remains the main destination of Korean OFDI (if the year
2001 is excluded). Second, the observed relative decline does not mean that
Korean OFDI dropped in all countries. To the contrary, China is attracting
increasing amounts of investments, at the expense of other Asian countries
such as Indonesia. Yet, even if China overtook the US as the main magnet
for Korean OFDI in 1998, over the period 1997-2001, it only managed to
attract about $1 billion (less than 10 per cent of total Korean OFDI),
compared to the US’ $3 billion (about 30 per cent).
Obviously, one of the motivations of Korean OFDI into China is
resource-seeking. Both large, and small- and medium-sized Korean firms
rushed into China, primarily in order to take advantage of cheap labor and
maintain their price competitiveness on export markets. According to the
Exim Bank of Korea, SMEs account for 54 per cent of total Korean
investment in China. Moreover, the bulk of these investments is taking
place in manufacturing. Yet, Korean firms may also be attracted by the
potential growth of the Chinese market. Such is probably the case in
36 International trade, capital flows and economic development in East Asia
Assessment
Risks and challenges A first risk has to do with the fact that financial
constraints may hinder desirable new investments. A number of firms may
have difficulties in finding adequate funding for their overseas projects for
instance. Government assistance may be warranted in such circumstances
but should be kept to a minimum and awarded under strict conditions and
after a thorough assessment of the project under consideration.
As recalled earlier, the priority today is to make sure that OFDI is based
on different and sounder grounds, in particular that it can contribute to
enhancing the competitiveness of Korean firms and stimulating economic
growth without giving rise to excessively risky ventures that may threaten
the well-being and stability of the national economy as a whole. To this
end, a number of measures can be imposed regarding the form of financing
in order to avoid excessive foreign borrowing in particular. Yet, beyond
these financing issues, a major difficulty pertains to the identification of the
investments that should be encouraged and those that need to be
streamlined. The assessment is all the more complicated since some
investments may appear unprofitable in the short run but may turn out to be
useful in the longer-term from the point of view of technology acquisition
for instance. The challenge is to manage to strike a (tricky) balance
between short-term objectives (currently dominated by financial
profitability) and longer-term considerations (related to the preservation of
Korean firms’ competitiveness).
From the perspective of firms, withdrawal decisions should be limited to
cases when performance is really poor, while OFDI projects should be
maintained for competitiveness preservation purposes, even in the absence
of immediate visible results. In the latter case, public help may be again
warranted.
From the point of view of the Government, the problem has really to do
with the scope of its industrial policy. The promotion of OFDI is rather
necessary for the improvement of international competitiveness, yet the
difficulty is to determine which industries should be helped, under which
38 International trade, capital flows and economic development in East Asia
Conclusion
A salient feature of the Korean experience is the limited, but effective, role
of FDI in the country’s economic development and restructuring. Until the
Asian financial crisis, FDI into Korea remained minimal because of the
lack of natural resources, the limited size of the local market (the growth of
which was also held in check by Government policies), as well as because
of the restrictive policy stance vis-à-vis foreign investors. Restrictions were
imposed according to the priorities set by the Government rather than
according to locational advantages. Although FDI has systematically been
constrained, it played a non negligible role in changing the productive
structure in Korea. In this respect, inward FDI has contributed very
selectively to the development of Korea’s technological capabilities and
contributed to the success of the country’s export-oriented strategy. More
importantly, by channeling FDI into specific industries, public policies
contributed to the enhancement of the competitive advantages of Korean
manufacturers, thereby enabling them to eventually launch their OFDI. It is
important to note at this stage that the real influence FDI could exert on the
Korean economy has little to do with its magnitude in absolute terms.
The liberalization drive initiated in the mid-1980s remained modest,
first because there was no perceived need to go ahead with such a move
and second because of the pressure exerted by the chaebols. As a result,
FDI was not fully used as an instrument of industrial restructuring and as a
means of enhancing the economy’s overall efficiency, with the financial
sector as a case in point. The recent crisis gave a renewed momentum to the
liberalization move, with both friendly and hostile M&As being allowed.
More than additional capacities in the form of greenfield investments,
Korea needed more efficient capacities and more competition. The new
surge of FDI is expected to help Korea develop new competitive
advantages and be instrumental in enhancing economic efficiency. Again,
even if FDI remains modest in absolute terms, its possible impact on the
Korean economy should not be under-estimated. The mere presence of
foreign agents matters, to the extent that they bring with them not only
technological know-how but also new business practices and can contribute
to stimulate competition. The crisis probably ushered in an entirely new era
characterized by more openness and a larger role for market mechanisms.
In this respect, FDI is likely to be more fully used as an instrument of
restructuring and of promotion of transparency. For this change to
FDI as a factor of economic restructuring: The case of South Korea 39
________________
References
Adelman, Irma and Song Byung Nak (1998), ‘The Korean Financial
Crisis of 1997-98’, mimeo.
Amsden, Alice (1989), Asia’s Next Giant - South Korea and Late
Industrialization, Oxford University Press, New York and Oxford.
Asian Development Bank (ADB 1997), Asian Development Outlook,
Manila.
Blomström, Magnus, and Ari Kokko (1996), ‘The Impact of Foreign
Investment on Host Countries : A Review of the Empirical Evidence’,
NBER working paper, n° 1745, December.
Blomström, Magnus, Denise Konan, and Robert E. Lipsey (2000), ‘FDI
in the Restructuring of the Japanese Economy’, NBER working paper, No
7693, May.
Borensztein Eduardo, Jose de Gregorio and J-W Lee (1998), « How
Does Foreign Direct Investment Affect Economic Growth ? », Journal of
International Economics, vol. 45, pp. 115-35.
Chaponnière, Jean-Raphaël (1997), “Korea: Open for Business”,
FinancialTimes Newsletters and Management Reports Asia Pacific.
Cho, Soon (1994), The Dynamics of Korean Economic Development,
Institute for International Economics, Washington, D.C..
Chung, Kwang S., and Yen Kyun Wang (2000), ‘Republic of Korea’, in
Zhuang Juzhong, David Edwards, David Webb and Ma Virginita Capulong.
(eds), Corporate Governance and Finance in East Asia: A Study of
Indonesia, Republic of Korea, Malaysia, Philippines and Thailand, ADB,
Manila, pp. 53-152.
Dent, Christopher M., and Claire Randerson (1996), ‘Korean Foreign
Direct Investment in Europe : the Determining Forces’, The Pacific Review,
vol. 9, n°4, pp. 531-552.
Dunning, John (1981), ‘Explaining Outward Direct Investment of
Developing Countries : in Support of the Eclectic Theory of International
Production’, in Kumar Krishna and Maxwell Mc Leod, Multinationals
FDI as a factor of economic restructuring: The case of South Korea 41
China: The Korean, Hong Kong and US Firms in the Shandong Province’,
mimeo, January.
Park, Daekeun and Changyong Rhee (1998), ‘Currency Crisis in Korea:
Could It Have Been Avoided?’, mimeo, April.
Park, YoungHo (1998), ‘Currency Crisis and Difficulties for Overseas
Affiliates : A Case Study on the Restructuring of Korean Affiliates in the
USA’, KIEP working paper, 98-09, December.
Park, Yung-Chul (1988), ‘Korea’, in Dornbusch, Rudiger and Leslie
Helmers (eds), The Open Economy - Tools for Policymakers in Developing
Countries, Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp. 336-47.
Rhee, Dong Kee (1999), ‘The Entry of Foreign Multinationals and Its
Impact on Korean Market’, mimeo, November
Sakong, Il (1993), Korea in the World Economy, Institute for
International Economics, Washington, D.C.
Seong, Somi (1997), ‘Industrial Policy in Korea’, in Masuyama, Seiichi,
Donna Vandenbrik and Chia Siow Yue (Eds), Industrial Policies in East
Asia, NRI and ISEAS, Singapore & Tokyo, pp. 53-66. .
UNCTAD (2001), World Investment Report 2001, United Nations, New
York and Geneva, 2001.
Woo, Cheonsik (1999), ‘Inbound FDI and Industrial Upgrading of
Korea : Prospects and Challenges’, Working paper, KDI, December.
Yun, Mikyung (2001), ‘FDI and Corporate Restructuring in Post-Crisis
Korea’, mimeo, Korea Institute for International Economic Policy, January.
Yun, Mikyung and Lee Sungmi (2001), ‘Impact of FDI on Competition:
The Korean Experience’, KIEP working paper, No 01-04, October.