What to
Know About the Chaebol Families That Dominate South Korea’s Economy
Conglomerates that sprawl across the society
trace their roots to the nation’s rise into a world power and have been tightly
controlled for generations.
·
The Lee family of Samsung, the Koos of LG,
the Cheys of SK, the Shins of Lotte and the Chungs of Hyundai are household names
·
The total sales of the five largest
conglomerates have consistently made up more than half of South Korea’s gross
domestic product in the past 15 years, topping 70 percent in 2012
·
Political leaders was
crucial to the chaebol companies’ growth into industrial conglomerates,
particularly under the regime of Park Chung-hee, who
came to power in a coup and ran the country for two decades until his
assassination in 1979.
·
Chaebol heads traveled with the South Korean president,
Yoon Suk Yeol, on a trip to Europe as part of South Korea’s bid for the World
Expo.
·
Park Geun-hye, the country’s former
president, was ousted from office
in 2017 and later sentenced to prison after she was convicted
of bribery, abuse of power and other criminal charges. Ms. Park and a longtime
confidante were found to have collected or demanded bribes from three chaebol
conglomerates: Samsung, SK and Lotte. Ms. Park was pardoned
in 2021 after serving almost five years of a 20-year prison sentence.
· Lee Jae-yong, chairman of Samsung Electronics, the country’s biggest chaebol, was also sentenced to two-and-a-half years in prison for his role. He was paroled and later pardoned by President Yoon in 2022, a move that allowed him to return to running the company.
[ABS
News Service/04.07.2025]
For decades, South Korea’s economy has
been dominated by a handful of family-run conglomerates that hold outsize wealth
and influence and factor into nearly every aspect of life in the country.
Because of their political heft, the chaebol,
as these families are known, have long been a matter of immense public interest.
The marriages, deaths, estrangements and legal troubles of these families are chronicled
in the South Korean press. Fictional chaebol families have been depicted in Korean
dramas. The Lee family of Samsung, the Koos of LG, the Cheys of
SK, the Shins of Lotte and the Chungs of Hyundai are household
names that have tightly held the reins of the companies that
are some of the country’s largest private sector employers.
Their power has been increasingly scrutinized
— both inside and outside South Korea — as an economic vulnerability, deepening
inequalities and fostering corruption.
Chaebol families have controlled South
Korea’s biggest companies for generations.
The chaebol system is a legacy of South
Korea’s history. After an armistice ended the Korean War in 1953, the country’s
military dictators anointed a handful of families for special loans and financial
support to rebuild the economy. The companies expanded quickly and moved from industry
to industry until they morphed into sprawling conglomerates.
Even as the companies grew in size, wealth
and influence, and sold shares on stock exchanges, they remained under family control
— typically run by a chairman who also presided as head of the family. Generational
leadership changes have sometimes unsettled chaebol families, forcing companies
to split or spin off into smaller groups.
More than two decades ago, during a family
struggle, Hyundai was divided among the founder’s six sons. The eldest son took
control of Hyundai Motor, now one of South Korea’s biggest companies. Under Chung
Eui-sun, the founder’s grandson, the family is still in charge of the global automaker.
These conglomerates make up a sizable portion
of South Korea’s economy.
South Korea’s rapid rise from postwar poverty
to a major developed economy in a couple of decades was closely tied to the rise
of chaebol companies. Their early successes boosted wages and living standards,
and drove the country’s exports.
The
total sales of the five largest conglomerates have consistently made up more than
half of South Korea’s gross domestic product in the past 15 years, topping 70 percent
in 2012, according to the book “Republic of Chaebol” by the economist
Park Sang-in. Their businesses also permeate South Korean life — from hospitals
to life insurance, from apartment complexes to credit cards and retail, from food
to entertainment and media, not to mention electronics.
Chaebol families have had cozy relationships
with the political leadership.
Patronage from political
leaders was crucial to the chaebol companies’ growth into industrial conglomerates,
particularly under the regime of Park Chung-hee, who came to power in a coup and ran the country
for two decades until his assassination in 1979. For Mr. Park, the chaebol
were an instrumental part of his ambition to enrich and
industrialize South Korea. To that end, his government steered funds to companies
that were cooperative with his agenda, protected them from competition and spared
them of public accountability.
While the close ties between the government
and the businesses have lessened in recent decades, political leaders still frequently
turn to them for support or counsel. In turn, the companies have at times been shielded
as being too vital to the economy to be broken up or scrutinized — something critics
have assailed as a “too big to jail” problem.
This summer, chaebol
heads traveled with the South Korean president,
Yoon Suk Yeol, on a trip to Europe as part of South Korea’s bid for the World Expo.
They also accompanied him on his visit to the United States
to meet with President Biden and were among the guests at a White House state dinner.
Several scandals have tarnished their public
image.
Chaebol companies have become enmeshed
in political corruption cases.
One of South Korea’s biggest political
scandals in recent years demonstrated the close ties between the political leaders
and the family-run conglomerates.
Park
Geun-hye, the country’s former president, was ousted from office in 2017
and later sentenced to prison after she was convicted of bribery, abuse of power
and other criminal charges. Ms. Park and a longtime confidante were found to have
collected or demanded bribes from three chaebol conglomerates: Samsung, SK and Lotte.
Ms. Park was pardoned in 2021 after serving almost five years
of a 20-year prison sentence.
Lee
Jae-yong, chairman of Samsung Electronics, the
country’s biggest chaebol, was also sentenced to two-and-a-half years
in prison for his role. He was paroled and later pardoned
by President Yoon in 2022, a move that allowed him to return to running the company.