The Colonial Origins of Korean Enterprise: 1910-1945 Buy on Amazon
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The Colonial Origins of Korean Enterprise: 1910-1945

110.00 USD

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Book Details
Author(s) Dennis L. McNamara
ISBN / ASIN 0521385652
ISBN-13 9780521385657
Availability Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank #4,831,617
Marketplace United States 🇺🇸
Description
South Korean conglomerates, or "chaebol," such as Hyundai and Samsung play a far more important role in Korean economy than do comparable large firms in the United States' and Japanese economies. Despite the importance of the chaebol to the rapid postwar development of the Korean economy, little has been written about their origins during the Japanese occupation. Through case studies of local ownership in major financial, commercial and industrial ventures, this book provides a detailed picture of indigenous capitalism during Japanese colonization. Drawing on Japanese government sources, Korean biographies and diaries, interviews, and United States intelligence material, the author gives a compelling account of key personalities in the Korean business elite and of the personal dilemmas of balancing nationalism against success under dependent, colonial conditions. The author concludes that dependent rather than comprador capitalism characterized leading Korean business through 1945. Patterns of concentration within family enterprises, close ties with the colonial state, and mutual support among a Korean inner circle of business leaders constitute a legacy of the colonial period important to the subsequent development of Korean conglomerates.
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