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Ex-Daewoo Group chief Kim Woo-choong dies at 82

Former Daewoo Group Chairman Kim Woo-choong, once touted as one of the most successful businessmen in South Korea, died late Monday at age 82, an organization affiliated with the now-defunct conglomerate said.

Kim, the founder of the trading-to-automobile conglomerate, died of a chronic disease at a local hospital late Monday night, according to Daewoosky Institute, which represents former employees of Daewoo Group.

He launched Daewoo Corp. in March 1967 to export textiles to Southeast Asian markets, and the trading company grew into Daewoo Group, the country's second-biggest conglomerate after Hyundai Group, through leveraged buyouts of numerous companies.

For the three decades after its foundation, Daewoo continued to acquire dozens of companies in the fields of automobile, trading, machinery, shipbuilding, construction and securities under the chairman's motto, "The World Is Still Wide and There Are Many Things to Do."


Former Daewoo Group Chairman Kim Woo-choong (Yonhap)
Former Daewoo Group Chairman Kim Woo-choong (Yonhap)

The group built its headquarters named Daewoo Building in central Seoul in 1977. The 23-story building was the tallest in Korea at that time.

Back then, conglomerates were widely accepted as entities "too big to fail" as they played a major role in supporting the economy and hired tens of thousands of employees.

Still, Daewoo's relentless expansion inevitably led to an overly diversified business structure, which was supported by massive debts.

Daewoo Group ran into serious financial problems during the 1997 Asian financial crisis and went bankrupt two years later.

Daewoo's flagship company, Daewoo Motor, was sold to General Motors Co. in 2002 and renamed GM Korea Co. Its other affiliates, such as Daewoo Engineering & Construction Co. and Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering Co., were sold to domestic rivals.

Following Daewoo's demise, Kim spent most of his time in Vietnam, where he focused on fostering Korean entrepreneurs under a project dubbed Global Young Business Manager.

As his health deteriorated, the former chairman returned to South Korea last year and received medical treatment at Ajou University Hospital, which he founded. He died at that hospital.

As his will, Kim asked that the GYBM program be continually developed to help the youth enter foreign markets and not only find employment but also launch their own businesses there, a Daewoo spokesperson said.

In 1998, Daewoo operated 41 domestic affiliates and 396 overseas branches and hired 300,000 employees globally. It accounted for 14 percent, or $18.6 billion, out of the country's overall exports worth $132.3 billion.

But Daewoo's overly diversified business structure and financing of the business mainly through borrowing hit the group like a boomerang amid the financial crisis.

The group came up with a restructuring plan to reduce the number of affiliates to 10 from 41 in late 1998, but most of the companies were forced to enter a workout program due to liquidity problems in August 1999.

After the group declared insolvency in late 1999, Kim was forced to carry the burden of the consequences. Once an inspiration to the country's youth, he was denigrated as a businessman whose buying binge crushed the households of thousands of Daewoo employees who were laid off.

In 2006, he was sentenced to eight and a half years in prison for window-dressing corporate finance books and ordered to forfeit 17.9 trillion won ($15 billion). He received a special presidential pardon the following year. (Yonhap)

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