Everything Korea March 27 Episode Chaebol Restructuring and Reform 2017
Reform in South Korean reaches back to the Asian Financial (IMF) Crisis of 1997. A bailout package from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) shut down insolvent banks and pushed debt-ridden industrial companies into receiverships. The remaining Groups still standing had little choice but to follow government mandates including restructuring and greater transparency. In some ways little has changed 20 years later… regulators continue to pressure the leading Korean groups to take on a more transparent corporate governance structure-- now in the form of a Holding Company model. So, what is a holding company? A holding company is a legal entity that owns other companies' stock. Holding companies typically do not run these businesses, but they do wield control over their affiliates or subsidiaries. In turn, a holding entity collects fees from operating units for the use of the corporate brand, which is considered an asset. The Korean governm...