Former Samsung boss Lee returns as chairman

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SEOUL: South Korea’s richest man Lee Kun-Hee returned yesterday as chairman of global giant Samsung Electronics, almost two years after stepping down following a probe into his business dealings.

Lee Kun-Hee

Lee Kun-Hee

Three months after Lee received a presidential pardon for tax evasion, the company said it needs his leadership “to take the upper hand in the global market amid the world economic crisis”.

But the 68-year-old expressed uncertainty about the future, as Samsung tries to grow in the face of increasing low-cost Chinese competition.

“This is a time of real crisis. Global companies are crumbling. We don’t know what will happen to Samsung either,” a company statement quoted him as saying when he agreed to return at the request of its executives.

“Within 10 years, all Samsung products may disappear. Now, we have to start anew. Let’s move on, with eyes set straight ahead.” During his 20 years as chairman, Samsung Electronics became the world’s largest maker of computer memory chips and second biggest manufacturer of mobile phones.

However, he resigned in April 2008 after being charged with tax evasion and breach of trust.

In July that year he was cleared of breach of trust but convicted of tax evasion, receiving a suspended prison sentence and a fine of US$109 million.

But last December he received a special pardon so he could resume his suspended membership of the International Olympic Committee and work to bring the 2018 Winter Olympics to the news.

Business circles welcomed the comeback.

“It will have a positive influence on Korea’s economy,” Lee Hyun-Seok, senior executive managing director of the Korea Chamber of Commerce and Industry, told journalists.

He said the move would help Samsung focus on long-term strategic investment rather than purely short-term profit.

Samsung Electronics reported annual earnings of more than US$8 billion last year, along with record sales.

It employs 164,600 people in 61 countries and is competing with Hewlett-Packard for the status of the world’s biggest technology firm by revenue.

But Korea Investment Securities’ analyst Kim Jung-Hoon said there was lingering uncertainty due to the effects of the global downturn as well as Chinese rivals that are fast catching up with South Korean firms.

“In the current situation, strong leadership is required. Lee’s return to the helm of the world’s largest producer of LCD panels and DRAM memory chips will be a great boon to the country’s economy,” he told AFP.

Samsung Electronics shares closed up just 10,000 or 1.24 per cent at 819,000 won, with investors saying the market had anticipated Lee’s return.

Kim Young-June, analyst with LIG Investment and Securities, told Dow Jones Newswires that Lee’s return is positive for the company’s management strategy.

“He might have decided to return to play a powerful leadership role in finding a future growth engine to capture a leading global position after the company survived the global financial crisis in good shape,” Kim Young-June said.

But Solidarity for Economic Reform, a group campaigning for better corporate governance, said Samsung had turned its back on reform promises made two years ago.

“Samsung’s promise to reform made in April 2008 turned out to be a public fraud only aimed at winning a favourable court ruling,” it said in a statement.

Lee is the son of the founder of the Samsung group, whose products or services touch every aspect of Koreans’ lives.

His own son Jae-Yong is being groomed as third-generation successor. — AFP