Bangkok Post

‘Hyundai Town’ faces grim future

Experts: Ulsan ‘Rust Belt’ in the making

- JUN HYUN-JOO YANG HEE-KYONG

ULSAN, SOUTH KOREA: When Lee Donghee came to Ulsan to work for Hyundai Heavy Industries Co Ltd five years ago, shipyards in the city known as Hyundai Town operated day and night and workers could make triple South Korea’s annual average salary.

But the 52-year-old was laid off in January, joining some 27,000 workers and subcontrac­tors who lost their jobs at HHI between 2015 and 2017 as ship orders plunged.

To support their family, Lee’s wife took a minimum wage job at a Hyundai Motor Company supplier. His 20-year-old daughter, who entered a HHI-affiliated university hoping to land a job in Ulsan, is now looking for work elsewhere.

The Lee family’s fortunes mirror the decline of Ulsan, which is now reeling from Chinese competitio­n, rising labour costs and its over-reliance on Hyundai — one of the giant, family-run conglomera­tes or chaebol that dominate South Korea.

Generation­s of Hyundai workers like Lee powered South Korea’s transforma­tion from the ashes of the 1950-53 Korean War to an industrial and manufactur­ing powerhouse, making the southeaste­rn port of Ulsan the country’s richest city by 2007.

But some experts say the chaebols have now become complacent and risk averse, failing to keep pace with their overseas competitor­s.

South Korea’s focus on exports has also made Asia’s fourth-largest economy vulnerable to growing protection­ism by major trade partners and other external shocks.

“Hyundai was everything to me. I feel hopeless,” Lee said at his apartment, a highrise complex popular with Hyundai Motor workers 10 kilometres (6 miles) from the automaker’s factory.

With young people fleeing in search of jobs, Ulsan is now the fastest-ageing city in the country, according to Statistics Korea. The city’s population of 1.1 million has more than quadrupled since 1970, but fell for the first time in 2016 even as population grew in the rest of the country.

ONCE A PROSPEROUS COMPANY TOWN

In many ways, the challenges facing Ulsan mirror those faced in the American Midwest in the 1970s and 1980s, when the once prosperous industrial heartland was hit by massive job and population losses.

Some experts and industry executive warn Ulsan — home to the world’s biggest shipbuilde­r and largest carmaking complex — might be South Korea’s ‘Rust Belt’ in the making.

“It could be worse here, since it’s all about Hyundai and its suppliers,” said Mo Jong-ryn, a professor of internatio­nal political economics at Yonsei University in Seoul. “There is no alternativ­e.”

Legendary businessma­n Chung Ju-yung founded Hyundai Motor in Ulsan in 1967 and HHI six years later, turning the small fishing village known for whale hunting into a giant company town.

For decades, job seekers flocked to the city, drawn by high wages, company-subsidised housing and generous benefits.

Hyundai’s dominance is still keenly felt. Workers wearing gray Hyundai uniforms drive Hyundai cars, shop at Hyundai department stores, live in Hyundai apartments and go to Hyundai hospitals for medical service. Their children go to Hyundai schools and universiti­es.

In the wake of the downturn, HHI has been selling assets such an employees’ dormitory, and a large foreign community complex it used for clients such as BP Plc and Exxon Mobil Corp and their families, officials say. The foreigners’ complex featured townhouses, a golf course, a swimming pool and school.

A spokesman said HHI was doing its utmost to “normalise our company”, working with labour unions to address a lack of work and an idled workforce.

Ripples from Hyundai’s struggles spread throughout Ulsan.

Eom Soon-ui runs a small noodle place in a traditiona­l market blocks away from Hyundai Heavy’s headquarte­rs. One recent workday, the market was mostly empty, with about a dozen restaurant­s as well as uniform shops catering to shipyard workers closed.

“Hyundai makes or breaks for merchants like us. They’re doing poorly, so I’m struggling to make ends meet,” she said.

Ulsan accounted for 12% of South Korea’s exports last year, the lowest since 2000 and down from its peak of 19% in 2008, according to customs data.

The city also has seen a rising number of suicides and now has the highest suicide rate in the country for those aged between 25 and 29, according to Statistics Korea.

Ulsan University Hospital, run by HHI, recorded 182 suicide attempts in the first half of this year, compared to about 150 a year earlier, a hospital official said.

Taxi drivers have been told by police not to drop people off on Ulsan’s newly built bridge after three people killed themselves there in just one month.

“People believed that if they work hard, they will be better off, and if their children study hard, they will be better off,” said Park Sang-hoon, an official at an Ulsan suicide prevention centre.

“Confrontin­g a different reality now, it seems that many of them are getting to a point of hopelessne­ss, and some are even making extreme choices.”

DOMINANT AT HOME, BUT FALTERING ABROAD

After massive shipbuildi­ng job losses, auto workers fear it could be their turn next.

Hyundai Motor has been already moving some production offshore, and an internal forecast seen by Reuters shows domestic output is expected to fall to 37% this year, down from nearly 80% in 2004.

Executives say that’s necessary because of high labour costs and strong unions at home.

But workers say many of Hyundai’s problems are its own making, like failing to forecast a SUV boom in the key US market and missing the shift to electric cars.

Hyundai Motor declined to comment for this story. Earlier this year, it pledged to hire 45,000 across the group over the next five years and invest heavily in new businesses including “wearable robots” and artificial intelligen­ce.

However, some experts say South Korea’s reliance on a few powerful chaebol is holding the country back.

South Korea’s top 10 conglomera­tes had revenue equivalent to 66% of the country’s gross domestic product in 2017. By comparison, the combined revenue of America’s top 500 companies was 65% of US GDP, according to Fortune magazine’s annual survey last year.

“South Korea’s chaebol have been complacent,” said Lee Dong-gull, the chairman of state-run Korea Developmen­t Bank. “Because of their near monopolist­ic market positions at home, conglomera­tes have been reluctant to take risks and slower to innovate.’’

Faltering in key overseas markets, South Korea forecasts export growth will slow to 5.3% in 2018 and 2.5% next year, from 15.8% last year.

NO LONGER A PARADISE

That means more pain for Ulsan and other exports hubs.

South Korean President Moon designated Ulsan and several other cities as “industrial crisis zones” in May, setting aside one trillion won ($890 million) this year to support affected workers and suppliers, and to promote new industries.

Moon says the chaebol-oriented economic policy has reached its limit, and has widened the gap between haves and have-nots.

Under a new policy of “innovative growth”, Seoul is boosting investment in fuel cells and self-driving cars, “smart factories” and drones, as well as artificial intelligen­ce, the internet of the things and big data.

Long-time Hyundai men say they aren’t feeling benefits of the new policy.

Lee, the former HHI worker, learned painting and molding to do home interior work, but is struggling to find a job because the downturn has also hit the real estate sector.

Ha M.H., who came to Ulsan in 1982, said he would leave HHI in August after 36 years, because the company’s backlog for offshore platforms has run dry.

“Foreign inspectors from Scotland and elsewhere who used to work here in good old days still call Ulsan a paradise,” Ha said. “All of my friends have left, and I am the last man standing.”

 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTOS BY REUTERS ?? ABOVE A sculpture of a actual sized propeller is seen in front of an apartment complex in Ulsan.
PHOTOS BY REUTERS ABOVE A sculpture of a actual sized propeller is seen in front of an apartment complex in Ulsan.
 ??  ?? A man on a motorbike waits for a traffic signal in front of Hyundai Heavy Industries’ shipyard in Ulsan. The letter reads ‘Our success is the success of the country, and the success of the country is the way we go well.’
A man on a motorbike waits for a traffic signal in front of Hyundai Heavy Industries’ shipyard in Ulsan. The letter reads ‘Our success is the success of the country, and the success of the country is the way we go well.’
 ??  ?? LEFT A poster hang on a window of an empty store at a traditiona­l market in Ulsan. The poster reads ‘Do not cut off labours, we can’t stand it’ and ‘Cheer up daddy’ in handwritte­n message.
LEFT A poster hang on a window of an empty store at a traditiona­l market in Ulsan. The poster reads ‘Do not cut off labours, we can’t stand it’ and ‘Cheer up daddy’ in handwritte­n message.

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