Kim Woo Choong
- born:
- December 19, 1936, Taegu, Korea [now in South Korea]
- died:
- December 9, 2019, Suwŏn, South Korea
Kim Woo Choong (born December 19, 1936, Taegu, Korea [now in South Korea]—died December 9, 2019, Suwŏn, South Korea) was a Korean businessman and founder of the Daewoo Group. Kim’s actions leading up to Daewoo’s eventual bankruptcy led to his fleeing the country and to his eventual prosecution on fraud charges.
Kim came of age during the Korean War (1950–53) and at age 14 found himself responsible for supporting his family. He sold newspapers to make ends meet and managed to graduate from the prestigious Kyunggi High School in Seoul. In 1960 he graduated from Yonsei University with a B.A. in economics.
Kim’s business career began in 1961 at Hansung Industrial Co., Ltd., a company owned by one of his relatives. Six years later he borrowed $10,000 to establish Daewoo Industrial Co., Ltd., a textiles trading business. The firm received a boost in 1976 when the South Korean government introduced state-led economic policies. Kim was asked to take over a debt-ridden heavy industry company. Within a year that company was making a profit, and Daewoo had a firm foundation in heavy industry as well as textiles. Kim went on to take over a shipyard company in 1978 and a home appliance business in 1983.
In the 1980s South Korea’s economic growth hit a snag owing to maturing markets and rising wages, and so Kim made daring investments in such far-flung countries as Libya, Poland, Pakistan, and Sudan. As a result, the Daewoo Group emerged as a global corporation. During this time Kim became a noted philanthropist, using his personal holdings in Daewoo to establish the Daewoo Foundation, a nonprofit organization that operated rural hospitals throughout South Korea and funded research in various fields. Kim was also a successful writer. His autobiography, Every Street Is Paved with Gold (1989), which he wrote primarily for young people, was a runaway best seller and was listed in the Korean edition of the Guinness Book of Records for having sold one million copies in five months.
Despite the Asian financial crisis that began in 1997, by 1998 the Daewoo Group, with 320,000 employees worldwide and $44 billion in assets, ranked 18th on Fortune magazine’s Global 500 List of the world’s largest corporations. The widely diversified conglomerate was involved in construction, shipbuilding, automobile manufacturing, telecommunications, electronics, textiles, and heavy industry. It was among the four largest conglomerates in South Korea.
In March 1998 Kim took over as chairman of the Federation of Korean Industries (FKI). The FKI, which represented the interests of several hundred companies, was considered South Korea’s most powerful business organization. Kim tried to use his new position to help combat South Korea’s economic slump, the worst since the end of the Korean War. He spearheaded nationwide campaigns to boost exports and increase foreign currency reserves, and he invested in auto companies around the world. His overinvestment backfired, however, and the Daewoo Group declared bankruptcy in 2000. The criminal and civil charges Kim faced in relation to the bankruptcy prompted him to resign from both FKI and Daewoo and to flee the country in 1999.
In the aftermath of the bankruptcy there were extensive layoffs from the Daewoo group, which precipitated rioting by former employees in early 2001. Seven of the company’s former executives were sent to prison on fraud charges later that year, while Kim remained in hiding. When he returned to his home country in 2005, he was arrested on charges including fraud and embezzlement. He was sentenced in 2006 to 10 years in prison and was ordered to return billions of dollars worth of funds. In 2007 South Korean Pres. Roh Moo-Hyun pardoned the ailing Kim.