Samsung Group

Last edited by lenazun on September 23, 2009 - 12:08pm
Company Snapshot: 

The Samsung Group is South Korea's largest conglomerate and a global multinational corporation leading several major industries. It is composed of numerous businesses, including Samsung Electronics, the world's largest electronics company, Samsung Heavy Industries, one of the world's biggest shipbuilders and Samsung Engineering & Construction, a major global construction company. These three businesses form the core of Samsung Group and reflect its name — the meaning of the Korean word samsung is "tristar" or "three stars". Samsung Group has a corporate responsibility for South Korea, forming a vital core part of the South Korean economy, accounting for more than 20% of the nation's total exports. The company has a powerful influence on the country's economic development, politics, media and culture. Many Koreans take Samsung Group as a symbol of National Pride and businesses use its international success as a role model, with the company being known as 'Another Family' or 'Our No.1 Brand' in South Korea. Samsung Group is South Korea's largest company and exporter, the 5th largest transnational corporation in the world and is helmed by chairman Lee Kun-Hee; the third son of the founder, Lee Byung-chul.

Starting in the 1990s, Samsung became a world leader in memory chip production, and in recent years it has been one of the largest producers of flat-panel displays and mobile phone sets. A few years ago the company was being described as the "new Sony," but it is now facing intensified competition as well as a wide-ranging corruption investigation launched by Korean prosecutors in late 2007.

Ownership status: 
Publicly traded
Number of employees worldwide: 
254,000
Chief executive officer: 
Kun-Hee Lee
Net Income: 
$12.9 billion
Total revenue: 
$158 billion
Corporate accountability
Accountability overview: 

The company’s reputation was tarnished later in 2005 when it pleaded guilty and paid a $300 million fine after being charged by U.S. government prosecutors with conspiring with the Korean company Hynix Semiconductor and the German Infineon Technologies to fix memory chip prices worldwide. That same year a Korean court convicted two Samsung executives of breach of trust for helping pass control of the group from Chairman Lee Kun Hee to his children—to the detriment of other shareholders.

In late 2007 Korean prosecutors launched a wide-ranging investigation of bribery and accounting irregularities throughout the Samsung Group. In mid-January 2008, investigators raised the office of Samsung’s chairman and the homes of his aides. According to press reports, prosecutors are looking at accusations that Chairman Lee and those aides amassed large slush funds to bribe government officials.

Labor: 

To this date, Samsung maintains a strict "no labor union" policy inside Korea, by closely monitoring workers and sometimes establishing "ghost labor unions" to prevent the creation of real ones. (Under Korean law, a company can have at most one labor union.) Although this has drawn intense criticism from Korean labor activists, many conservative media, including Joongang Ilbo with its close ties with Samsung group, actually views this as a case study of why labor unions are bad for economy and should be suppressed at each company's discretion (because Samsung has been immensely successful as a company).

Environment and product safety: 

According to Greenpeace International, Samsung has "announced plans to phase out toxic chemicals in all their products." To see how the company stacks up against the competition, go to Greenpeace's Guide to Cleaner Electronics.

To view the company's self-described "green management" go here.

Anti-competitive and consumer protection: 

On November 30, 2005, Samsung pled guilty to a charge it participated in dynamic random access memory chip (DRAM) price fixing collusion during 1999-2002 that damaged competition and raised PC prices. In a deal with prosecutors, Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. and its U.S. subsidiary, Samsung Semiconductor Inc., were to pay a $300 million fine. As a result of this investigation, Hynix was to pay $185 million in 2005, and Infineon $160 million in 2004. Micron Technology, the US firm who initiated the case, cooperated with prosecutors and no fine is expected. Also, five Samsung executives along with four executives each from Infineon and Hynix and one from Elpida and one from Micron technologies received a prison sentence with the longest being 10 months by Young Hwan Park, president of Samsung Semiconductor Inc. For the U.S. Justice Department's press releases go here and here. For the plea agreement go here.

On September 7, 2007, the International Herald Tribune reported that Park Kwang-kee, managing director of Thai Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd., and Kim Chung-jun, the company's general manager in Thailand were arrested and charged with fraud: "Kim, allowed to speak to reporters at a news conference at the economic and cyber crime division, denied the allegations and said they were the result of a business dispute."

A spokesperson for TWZ subsidiary Sam Corp. said the company filed a lawsuit alleging that Park had breached an agreement by refusing to pay promised promotional funds to help it sell Samsung mobile phones after obliging Sam Corp. to buy outdated phone models.

In 2006, RealTechNews reported that Samsung was being sued by various movie studios for a DVD player they claimed was "hacker-friendly."

Political influence (national and international): 

In November 2007, Korean prosecutors launched a probe into allegations by a former company attorney that Samsung Group officials kept a slush fund and bribed prosecutors, judges and lawmakers. Among the allegations are that chairman Lee Kun Hee masterminded a bribery network and paid out millions to facilitate the illegal transfer of a controlling stake in the family business to his son. The claim is that from 1997 to 2004, Samsung bribed senior politicians, journalists, bureaucrats and court officials to win special deals for the business.

In 2005, a Seoul court convicted two Samsung executives for breach of trust for allowing the younger Lee to buy a controlling stake in Samsung's holding company for less than 10 percent of its market value. In response to that ruling (which is under appeal), chairman Lee agreed to donate $880 million to fund a charity for needy students and make amends "for wrong customs in the past," as he put it.

Samsung consistently denied the allegations, which were made by former Samsung lawyer Kim Yong-chul. Kim, a lawyer who worked at Samsung Group from 1997-2004, said the alleged slush fund totaled $215 million.

Executives were banned from leaving the country and prosecutors ransacked Samsung's offices.

On November 23, 2007, ABC reported that the South Korean Parliament had voted to allow an independent counsel to investigate the case.

The Corporate Crime Reporter listed Samsung America Inc. as # 100 on its top 100 Corporate Criminals of the 1990s list. According to CCR, "Samsung America Inc. pled guilty to violating the Federal Election Campaign Act. The company made $10,000 in illegal contributions to the 1992 Jay Kim for Congress Campaign Committee." (10 Corporate Crime Reporter 6(5), February 12, 1996)

Social responsibility: 

On December 18, 2005, the Ethics Scorecard named a Samsung phone camcorder ad an "ethics polluter" -- for not simply act[ing] unethically, but also actively promot[ing] and attempt[ing] to legitimize unethical conduct:

"The Samsung corporation, proud as punch about its new cell phone camcorder that permits its user to record up to two hours of video, has launched a TV ad campaign featuring a young executive who uses its new product to rise to the top of his company. How? Why, by extorting its executives using surreptitious video he takes at the office Christmas party!"

History

Samsung (which means "three stars" in Korean) was founded by Byung-Chull Lee, the son of a wealthy landowner who had studied briefly in Japan. In 1936, at the age of 35, he moved to the city of Taegu and set up a rice mill, but he ended up spending more time trading a variety of commodities, including dried fish, wool and textiles. Two years later he incorporated the trading operation as the Samsung Commercial Co. and soon branched out to Beijing and Manchuria.

Lee managed to go on operating during the Second World War; in fact, he expanded into transportation, food and beverages, real estate, and other businesses. In 1947 he moved his headquarters to Seoul and established an international trading operation called Samsung Mulsan.

Samsung's operations were devastated during the Korean War, looted by both sides during the conflict. Lee was left with only one business, the Choson Brewery in Pusan, a city that had been spared by the fighting. Using that as a base, he re-established Samsung in 1951 and resumed rapid growth, thanks in large measure to the company's role in supplying the United Nations forces that remained in the country. He created the Cheil Sugar Company in 1953 and the Cheil Wool Textile Company the following year. (Cheil means "number one" in Korean.)

With the success of these operations, Lee moved into the service sector, with the founding of the Dongbang Life Insurance Company and Samsung Construction and the purchase of extensive bank holdings. By the end of the 1950s Samsung had become a true chaebol.

After Park Chung Hee seized power in 1961, Lee was accused of tax evasion and other financial crimes. Yet he managed to have the politically-motivated charges dropped in exchange for an agreement to turn over to the government a huge fertilizer plant he was constructing. Lee later regained control of the plant, but in the mid-1960s found himself and one of his sons again embroiled in a public scandal. And once again, Lee managed to escape jail by turning over the fertilizer plant to the government.

These troubles did not slow down the company's growth. Samsung diversified into department stores, papermaking, broadcasting, newspaper publishing, and other fields. In 1969 the company established Samsung Electronics with help from Japan's Sanyo. The electronics company first got involved in producing inexpensive black-and-white television sets (designed by disassembling foreign models) that were supplied to customers such as Sears and J.C. Penney, which sold them under their own name. The company soon expanded to color televisions, VCRs, and microwave ovens.

Meanwhile, the Samsung Group continued to grow, entering, with government encouragement, such fields as shipbuilding, aircraft engine maintenance, petrochemicals, and other heavy industry. The government, however, limited automobile production to company rivals Daewoo and Hyundai. In 1980 the company purchased Korea Telecommunications and renamed it Samsung Semiconductor and Telecommunications, which soon became an important producer of memory chips and was later merged into Samsung Electronics. After Chun Doo Hwan seized power in 1981, the government took over Samsung's television and radio stations.

Samsung Electronics gradually transformed itself from a low-end producer into a manufacturer of more sophisticated equipment. This went along with an ambitious marketing drive to make the company's name better known to consumers abroad. By the late 1980s Samsung was becoming as familiar as Japanese brands like Toshiba and Hitachi.

Under pressure from the Korean government, Samsung took steps to limit its focus on a smaller number of industries, especially electronics, chemicals, and heavy industry (including shipbuilding). As for electronics, Samsung moved beyond mass-produced memory chips to a leading position in the production of specialized semiconductors, thanks to alliances with Japanese companies such as NEC and Toshiba. Samsung’s heavy industry business sought to expand into automobiles (with help from Japan’s Nissan) and airliners.

The company’s ambitions were tempered by the Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s, but once conditions improved, Samsung moved aggressively in markets such as telecommunications devices, flat-panel displays and digital appliances. At the same time, Samsung gave up on automobiles, selling its car business to Renault in 2000.

By 2003 Samsung led the world in memory chips and flat-panel displays and trailed only Nokia in mobile telephone sets. The company’s electronic products were so well regarded that in March 2005 the New York Times published a story headlined: “Samsung Is Now What Sony Once Was.” That year the company announced it would invest the equivalent of $33 billion to build nine new chip lines in South Korea, creating 14,000 jobs in the process.

Soon, Samsung’s business results were looking less impressive. Operating profits began to slump as Samsung faced increasing competition in its key markets. Business Week suggested in mid-2007 that Samsung was having “a Sony moment.” The bribery investigation launched by Korean prosecutors in late 2007 may be a sign of worse things to come.

Other Information: 

Like other family conglomerates in Asia (known as Chaebols in Korea), Samsung is held together thru a multitude of cross-shareholdings in what John Ward, a family-enterprise expert at the Kellogg School of Management in Chicago, calls a "pyramid structure."

Financial information
Fiscal year: 
2006
Fiscal year: 
2006