Chaebol reform at forefront of South Korea presidential campaign - again

FILE PHOTO: The headquarters of Hyundai Motor and Kia Motors are seen in Seoul, November 16, 2011. REUTERS/Jo Yong-Hak/File Photo · Reuters

By Hyunjoo Jin, Se Young Lee and Nichola Saminather

SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea’s family-run conglomerates are facing calls for a shakeup in their governance from a leading candidate in May's presidential election, following the ouster of former President Park Geun-hye in a burgeoning influence-peddling scandal.

The conglomerates known as chaebol have come under the reform buzz saw before, only to emerge bigger and stronger than ever. The country’s four biggest chaebol groups account for around half the stock market's value, according to the Korea Stock Exchange.

The question after the May 9 election is how deep will the reform drive go this time? And would a new president tackle what critics say is at the heart of chaebol corporate governance conundrum - the spiderweb of cross-shareholdings among group companies held by their founding families?

"...I do think there has been a sea change in attitudes among the Korean population at large so there is an increased chance of chaebol reform succeeding," said Mark Mobius, the executive chairman of Templeton Emerging Markets Group.

"But we can’t expect fast results simply because the importance of the chaebols in the economy is still so great," he added in an email interview.

PARDONING CORPORATE CHIEFS

The ouster of Park Geun-hye as president on March 10, following months of mass demonstrations, once again exposed the cozy ties between politicians and big business. Park herself had come into office promising to reform the conglomerates.

Prosecutors said on Monday they are seeking an arrest warrant for Park, who faces charges of taking bribes from chaebol bosses, including Samsung's Jay Y. Lee, in detention himself while on trial.

The front-runner for the May 9 presidential election, Moon Jae-in has promised to end the practice of pardoning convicted corporate criminals, and to break up the nexus between big business and the government in the world's 11th-largest economy.

Moon is targeting the top four groups -- Samsung, Hyundai Motor, SK and LG -- according to his economic advisor, Kim Sang-jo, nicknamed "chaebol sniper" for his shareholder activist campaign in the past two decades.

"It will be difficult or almost impossible for chaebol to do things in the ways they used to do," Kim told Reuters.

The key to Moon's chaebol reform policy is to get minority shareholders and board members to drive the pressure for better corporate governance in the family conglomerates, Kim said.

FAMILIAR REFRAIN

The scandals and calls for reform have a familiar refrain.

Twenty years ago, South Korea began sliding into its rendition of the Asian financial crisis, starkly illustrating the pitfalls in the government-business symbiosis that was the basis of South Korea's remarkable economic takeoff. The government was forced to take a nearly $60 billion bailout from the International Monetary Fund to stave off national bankruptcy.