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XI - Direct Foreign Investment and the Economic Development of Korea

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 October 2015

Chung H. Lee
Affiliation:
University of Hawaii at Manoa
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Summary

Introduction

It is now widely accepted that Korea's economic success during the past three decades was due to, inter alia, the adoption of an outward-oriented development strategy (Lee and Naya 1988). This outward-oriented development strategy can be characterized by the following four principles: 1) Preferential treatment of manufacturing activities, where warranted for infant-industry considerations, is applied on a moderate scale; 2) Equal treatment is given to exports and import substitutes in manufacturing; 3) Variation in incentives within manufacturing is kept to a minimum; and 4) The system of incentives is stable and automatic to minimize uncertainty (Balassa 1980,1981). By adopting an outward-oriented development strategy based on these principles, Korea was able to expand its exports rapidly and to transform itself from an agrarian economy into a manufacturing exporter in a short period of time.

In contrast, Korea maintained a restrictive direct foreign investment (DFI) policy until the middle of the 1980s; consequently, its effect cannot be described as having been neutral in terms of resource allocation. The restrictive foreign investment policy limited the amount of investment and the industries in which investment could be made, and, in terms of resource allocation, it resembled Korea's restrictive financial policy rather than its trade policy.

This paper examines and evaluates Korea's DFI policy and attempts to answer the following questions: What has been Korea's policy on DFI in the past three decades? What has been the effect of DFI on its economic development? And has the policy been equivalent to the outward-oriented development strategy in terms of the effect on resource allocation and been consistent with it in terms of the policy objectives? To this end, the pattern and trends of DFI in Korea are presented, and its overall importance to the economy is examined. This paper will also discuss and evaluate Korea's DFI policy in terms of the effect of DFI on the Korean economy.

Pattern and Trend of DFI in Korea

DFI in Korea began in 1962 with a joint venture established by an American textile company producing nylon filaments (table 1). Over the next five years (1962-66), investment projects involving $47.4 million and 39 firms were approved, while the actual investment amounted to $24.3 million (51 percent of the approved amount).

Type
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Information
Economic Development in East and Southeast Asia
Essays in Honor of Professor Shinichi Ichimura
, pp. 169 - 184
Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute
Print publication year: 1990

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