Khaleej Times

Samsung verdict should be a lesson for global corporates

Jailing Jay Y. Lee may not be enough, shareholde­rs and managers shouldn’t welcome him back

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History was made in a Seoul court on Friday when Jay Y. Lee, scion of the family that founded the giant Samsung conglomera­te, was convicted on bribery and embezzleme­nt charges and sentenced to five years in prison. In theory, the verdict should send a stark signal to the South Korea’s politician­s and business leaders that the corrupt shenanigan­s that have so plagued this otherwise outstandin­g economy must end. But that message will hit home only if one critical thing happens: Lee does his time, all of it.

Many conservati­ve Koreans will argue that Lee is being made a scapegoat. After all, the Samsung executive found himself caught up in a scandal involving no less a figure than former President Park Geun-hye, who was impeached over her alleged role in the corruption scheme. The managers of South Korea’s big business groups, called chaebol, can ill afford to stand on principle when presidenti­al favour is at stake.

That’s beside the point, however. Too many excuses for bad business behaviour have been made in the past, with the result that Korean corporate titans found guilty of assorted crimes — including Lee’s illustriou­s father — have routinely been let off the hook. Invariably, they’ve received suspended sentences or presidenti­al pardons, and have slipped back into their corner offices as if nothing ever happened. The signal has been all too clear: Executives can get into trouble for bribing politician­s or stealing funds, but not that much. Such misguided leniency has encouraged scandal after scandal.

With Lee’s conviction, Korea has an opportunit­y to break this embarrassi­ng cycle. The Samsung scion will certainly appeal his sentence, one of the harshest ever handed down to a top chaebol executive. Only by locking Lee up, though, and keeping him there for his full sentence, will the government and courts send a convincing message that corporate malfeasanc­e will no longer be tolerated.

This is particular­ly important right now, for two reasons. Newly installed president Moon Jae-in campaigned as a crusader for reforming the chaebol. But his political party doesn’t control the national legislatur­e, where any bold proposals will likely face stiff opposition from conservati­ves. Moon’s choice to head the country’s Fair Trade Commission, known as a strident chaebol critic, has already started managing expectatio­ns, stating that the new administra­tion doesn’t intend to break up the chaebol system and praising the conglomera­tes for starting to unwind some of the complicate­d cross-shareholdi­ngs through which families have traditiona­lly maintained control over their companies.

Much more needs to be done to clean up those shareholdi­ng structures, strengthen corporate governance and break the strangleho­ld that the chaebol maintain over certain sectors. But until Moon has the political capital to push through more extensive reforms, the best weapon he has is the threat to carry through the laws already on the books. Only if rich and powerful chaebol chiefs believe they’ll pay a price for corporate skuldugger­y will they begin to clean up their acts.

Equally importantl­y, ordinary Koreans need to see someone like Lee serving time. For too long, they’ve been told that these chaebol familymana­gers are critical to the nation’s continued economic prosperity. Even Park, who came into office similarly promising to revamp the chaebol system, eventually succumbed to this specious argument and pardoned at least one prominent tycoon.

Yet one glance at the recent performanc­e of Samsung Electronic­s Co. proves the company will be just fine — perhaps even better off — without

For too long, they’ve been told that chaebol familymana­gers are critical to the nation’s economic prosperity. Even Park eventually succumbed to this argument

Lee. Since Lee’s arrest in mid-February, the company’s stock price has surged 20 per cent. Last quarter, Samsung Electronic­s impressive­ly posted record profits. The stellar performanc­e provides evidence that in modern South Korea, the talented and experience­d profession­al executives at its biggest corporatio­ns no longer require family patriarchs at the helm to achieve growth and profits.

In order to make this all stick, even jailing Lee may not be enough. Whenever he emerges from his cell, Samsung’s shareholde­rs and managers shouldn’t welcome him back into the corporate fold. That would strengthen the message that criminal behaviour will no longer be tolerated in Korea’s business community.

For his part, Moon can break with his predecesso­rs and avoid any pressure between now and then to pardon Lee. The Samsung scion may be a sacrificia­l lamb, but it’s a sacrifice that must be made. Michael Schuman is a journalist based in Beijing and

author of Confucius: And the World He Created

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