The Pak Banker

Returning to Samsung's helm

- Andrew Salmon

Lee Jae-yong, the vice-chairman, heir and de facto head of national flagship and global mega-brand Samsung Electronic­s, will be released from prison Friday after serving eight months of a two-and-a-half-year sentence for bribery.

Lee, also known as JY, was sentenced in January in a retrial of a case that also impacted former President Park Geun-hye, who is serving a 33-year compound sentence for corruption and abuse of power.

The parole decision was taken by the Justice Ministry as part of a program that takes effect every year around August 15, the anniversar­y of liberation from Japanese colonial rule in 1945. Altogether, 810 people are being paroled.

The controvers­ial tycoon was paroled "in considerat­ion of the national economic situation and the global economic environmen­t" amid the Covid-19 pandemic, the Ministry of Justice said in a statement released to foreign reporters. The ministry "comprehens­ively considered" various factors, including "society's emotions," the release stated.

The decision was made public on Monday night. Lee was expected to walk on Friday.

As he is being paroled rather than pardoned, Lee is not permitted to engage in corporate activities for five years. However, few believe that will keep him out of Samsung's C-suite.

Yet while Lee is Samsung heir by birth, his business nous is far from clear. During his jail terms, the company continued to operate highly effectivel­y under profession­al managers, who have also taken major investment decisions.

While the decision on Lee's parole was released on Monday evening, on Tuesday Samsung stock fell 1.6%.

The news of his release was welcomed by the business community, which favors corporate stability and managerial decisionma­king. But it has drawn criticism from civic groups, given that conglomera­te leaders have a long history of abusing power and evading justice in South Korea.

Out of jail …

Lee and a cabal of executives were found guilty of engaging in fraudulent practices to enable the merger to two Samsung affiliates - Samsung C&T and Cheil Industries - in 2015.

After the removal of his father, Chairman Lee Keun-hee, from management due to a stroke in 2014, that merger helped consolidat­e the younger Lee's control over the huge and complex conglomera­te. It was vocally opposed by some shareholde­rs.

The case not only implicated the National Pension Service, which held stakes in the related companies, but also sucked in then-president Park. Park, in 2016, trapped in a massive influence-peddling scandal of which the Samsung affair was only one element, was impeached, removed from office and imprisoned in 2017 after the Moon Jaein government took power.

Lee was found guilty of corruption in August 2017 and sentenced to five years. In February 2018, an appeals court reduced his sentence to two and a half years and released him. In January 2021, he was retried and rejailed for two and a half years - a case which he said he would not appeal.

A parade of South Korean conglomera­te leaders has been released early from prison sentences for corporate crimes, or otherwise pardoned or paroled, with judges - and even presidents - citing their importance to the national economy as the reason. South Korean society has been split on the JY Lee issue.

Some consider it good riddance to a corrupt business leader who wanted to maintain control of Samsung at all costs. Others believe Lee merely acted in a way that is customary for business leaders and corporate heirs in a highly complex political-judicial landscape.

"Outside of Korea people might see this as rather shocking - that the head of Samsung, one of the world's best-known brands - serves a jail sentence and it is not even suggested that, as a convicted felon, he will be replaced," said Mike Breen, Seoulbased author of The New Koreans. "That is because he is not really seen as a criminal in the eyes of Koreans."

South Korea was hugely successful at industrial­izing in the 1960s, '70s and '80s. However, the vehicle which drove that success - a nexus of politics, bureaucrac­y and private business - was a hive of moral hazard.

Despite widespread changes in South Korea, practices from those days linger, the rule of law is often subject to the rule of politics and the family-run conglomera­tes of yore - the chaebol - remain deeply entrenched in the economy.

As a result, "everybody knows that the legal and political landscape that business has to negotiate is so complex that the head of every large conglomera­te, or most of them, technicall­y, have criminal records," Breen said. Another element is public opinion - including the opinion of the business community.

The pardoning of the billionair­e is hardly likely to generate street protests in any significan­t numbers, and big business lobby groups were all in favor, citing positives for the national economy.

"The decision reflects the people's demand for economic recovery and their call for Samsung to play a role in leading the recovery," the Federation of Korean Industries told local media, while the Korean Chamber of Commerce and Industry said the decision would accelerate decision making at Samsung.

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