Reprinted from Clyde V. Prestowitz on Trade

Korean Shoe Factory, 1972 (Photo: Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library / Flickr)
In 1979, Harvard professor Ezra Vogel’s book Japan As Number One became a runaway best seller in both Japan and the United States. After a swing through Asia the past two weeks, it’s clear to me that Ezra needs to do a rewrite with a new title: Korea as Number One.
The South Koreans have long been confident that anything the Japanese can do, they can do better, but now they’re proving it. In the 1970s-80s, the likes of Sony, Panasonic, Sharp, Toshiba, Hitache, NEC, and Fujitsu killed off RCA, Motorola, and the rest of the American consumer electronics industry and came close to killing off Intel and closing down the U.S. semiconductor industry from which Silicon Valley takes its name. Yet, today, it’s the Japanese who are on the ropes as the likes of Samsung, LG, and Hynix have seized the high ground. Whereas Sony used to be the king of TV, now it’s Samsung. Developed initially in the United States in response to military needs, the market for flat panel electronic displays was quickly taken over by the Japanese who out-invested the American producers and whose dominance of television and then of VCR production gave them an in-house source of demand for mass production and its related economies of scale.
Indeed, the VCR is a classic example. America’s Ampex developed the initial professional video tape recording technology, but never got a consumer product off the ground as the Japanese preempted the market through quick, massive investment. Because VCRs were massive users of semiconductor memory chips, the dominance of the VCR business coupled with use of the same tactics in the semiconductor industry gave the Japanese producers a strong position from which to attack the Silicon Valley chip makers. In 1984-85, many U.S. companies left the business and the Japanese became the dominant players in DRAMS (dynamic random access memories).
Well, in the past month, both of Japan’s main chip makers (Elpida and Renasas) have declared bankruptcy while leading flat panel maker Sharp is selling off pieces of itself to Taiwan’s HonHai. Rudely pushing the Japanese aside are South Korea’s Samsung, LG, and Hynix. Nor, is it only and electronics phenomenon. In the auto industry South Korea’s Hyundai/Kia Motors is gobbling up market share in the U.S., European, Chinese, Indian, and Southeast Asian markets at the expense of the Japanese producers. The same goes for shipbuilding and even soap operas where the Korean shows are even all the rage in Japan. Perhaps most telling is the fact that South Korea’s GDP per capita is now about 90 percent of Japan’s and appears to be on track to surpass Japan’s in the next couple of years.
To achieve all this, the Koreans have used a well known, tried and true formula. For starters, they have worked like crazy, saved like crazy, and invested like crazy. At the same time, like the Japanese, they have rejected American ideas and advice about specializing only in what they do best and trading for the rest. Rather, they have concentrated on developing world class capabilities where before they had none. They did this by protecting and subsidizing in various ways new, infant industries like steel, consumer electronics, and semiconductors. But they also knew their own market was not big enough to yield the necessary economies of scale. So they have had to focus on exports and become competitive in global markets by keeping their currency, the won, somewhat under-valued and by often selling abroad at prices below their own domestic prices. The most successful Korean companies are either those like steel maker Posco that was founded with government investment or those like Samsung that are giant family dominated conglomerates with extensive special relationships with the government and monopoly or quasi -monopoly positions in many interlocking industries and technologies.
This is, of course, the classic Japanese formula. It is the formula Lee Kuan Yew of Singapore had in mind when the advised his countrymen to “look East” for a model to imitate for their own development. It really works, and the Koreans are again proving that anything that works for the Japanese can be made to work better by Koreans.



5 Comments

That’s what Thom Hartmann said! Your post could well be read in conjunction with his Obama Drinks Friedman’s Kool-Aid post of 7/14/09:
On the other hand, Japan has a Gini egalitarianism co-efficient of 24.9, second best in the world, with Korea’s 31.6 in 29th place (the U.S. co-efficient is 40.9, 89th place). On the Global Peace Index Japan is #3 and South Korea #43 of 149 countries.
http://www.visionofhumanity.org/gpi-data/#/2010/GINI
And a better place for beginning to understand Japan’s long-term problems should sound familiar: the Bank of Japan has for two decades been incredibly protective of Japan’s 1% and creditors in general, to the detriment of its manufacturers. That has led to this:
Strong Yen Belies a Worrisome Japanese Economy
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-06-03/strong-yen-belies-a-worrisome-japanese-economy.html
TYPO ALERT:
spot on comment -
and now both parties are afraid of the media/web ad charge that they are picking winners and losers – we can’t even push “green” companies.
meanwhile Asia moves by “protecting and subsidizing in various ways new, infant industries”.
It is not a currency level problem – it’s as you note a protection of the 1% and because they are the creditors of the nation, protecting creditors.
Ya, one group of corporatists is beating another group of corporatists.
This is … ya, don’t care.
Go South Korea, because you are sooooo different than the North right?
http://www.inthesetimes.com/working/entry/7377/south_korea_free_trade_deal_opens_wide_funnel_for_more_exploitation/
“OPENING FUNNEL TO REPRESSIVE REGIMES’ PRODUCTION
KORUS would potentially open up the United States to components produced under one of the world’s most tightly-repressive nations. The rigid police state of North Korea has opened up a free-trade zone employing about 40,000 workers currently. South Korean firms operating factories in the zone typically pay the North Korean government just $3 to $4 per day per worker, of which the worker gets to keep just $1.
South Korean planners are now considering a ten-fold expansion of the North Korean free-trade zone, along with the potential for setting up another near the Chinese border. As long as 35% of the final value of the products is derived from South Korea, these, too, would be entitled to “free trade” status with the United States.”
http://gvnet.com/humantrafficking/SouthKorea.htm
“The Republic of Korea (ROK) is a source country for the trafficking of women and girls within the country and to the United States (often through Canada and Mexico), Japan, Hong Kong, Guam, Australia, New Zealand, and Canada, for the purpose of commercial sexual exploitation. The ROK is a destination country for women from Russia, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, the People’s Republic of China (PRC), the Philippines, Thailand, Cambodia, and other Southeast Asian countries, some of whom are recruited to work on entertainment visas and may be vulnerable to trafficking for sexual exploitation or domestic servitude. Some brokers target poor women and runaways, pay off their debts, and then use this as leverage to force them to work in the commercial sex trade. Labor trafficking is a problem in South Korea, and some employers allegedly withhold the passports and wages of foreign workers, a practice that can be used as a means to subject workers to forced labor. – U.S. State Dept Trafficking in Persons Report, June, 2009 [full country report]”
http://humantrafficking.org/countries/south_korea
“South Korea
The Situation
The Republic of Korea (ROK or South Korea) is a source, transit, and destination country for human trafficking of men and women subjected to forced prostitution and forced labor.
Source
South Korean women and girls are trafficked for forced prostitution abroad in destinations including the United States, Canada, Japan, and Australia. Many of these victims are coerced by traffickers to whom they owe debts.”
http://mostlywater.org/node/1104
“South Korean labour laws reduce migrant workers to slaves”
“To migrant workers, the EPS is a law that allows slavery. According to the new law, migrant workers can work in South Korea for only three years and for only one employer. Since migrant workers cannot change their work place, the employer basically has complete control over the wages and working conditions of migrant workers; thus these workers are bound to the employer like slaves”
http://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_editorial/341437.html
“Human trafficking in S. Korea”
““Natasha,” 29, came to South Korea from Uzbekistan to realize the simple dream of living a slightly more comfortable life, and the terrible suffering she endured here is a shame on us all. She came to this country through a sham marriage with a Korean, enticed to hear that she could earn five times her salary at home if she got a job at a factory assembling cell phones. But her dream was brutally crushed the moment she set foot on Korean soil. The place awaiting her was not a cell phone assembly plant but a prostitution business. After suffering terrible hardship, she managed to escape. But instead of being protected by South Korean law, she was booked on charges like “making false entries in public electronic records.””
http://www.newsflash.org/2004/02/ht/ht004954.htm
“NBI Busts Mail-Order Bride Syndicate”
“In his report to Wycoco, NBI Anti-Human Trafficking Division (AHTRAD) chief Romulo Asis said the group’s modus operandi was to entice Filipino women to apply for match-marriages with male Koreans. Asis said Korean clients would come to the Philippines and choose a wife to take to Korea. However, two months after the arranged marriage, the husband abandons the wife and looks for another Filipina to marry.”
A joke I heard (Disclaimer: and one I disagree with completely, and I find no humor in, … I know how everyone is so concerned about violence or even the implication of violence here, so all the FDLers should keep that in mind):
Q: What’s 10,000 1% at the bottom of the sea?
A: Not fucking enough, … not nearly fucking enough.