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Chung Ju-yung
South Korean entrepreneur (1915–2001) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Chung Ju-yung or Jung Joo-young (Korean: 정주영; 25 November 1915 – 21 March 2001) was a South Korean entrepreneur and the founder of Hyundai Group, one of the largest chaebols in South Korea. Chung founded Hyundai Heavy Industries. He is considered influential in the development of the South Korean economy. Under his leadership, Hyundai became the world's largest shipbuilder while Hyundai Motor Group expanded to become the largest automobile manufacturer in Korea and the third-largest worldwide.[1][2]
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Early life
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Chung Ju-yung was born on 25 November 1915 into an impoverished family in Tongchon County, Korea, Empire of Japan (now Kangwon Province, North Korea).
When not occupied with work on the family farm, Ju-yung attended his grandfather's Confucian school. During these trips to town, he began to sell wood to help support his family.[3][4]
First escape attempt
At sixteen, Chung and a friend decided to travel to the city of Seishin (Chongjin, currently in North Korea) for work, hoping to escape the harsh realities of farm life.[3][5] After a 15-mile trek through the most dangerous parts of the Paechun Valley, the pair reached the town of Kōgen, where they took up jobs as construction workers.[3] Ju-yung and his friend continued working for two months until his father learned of their whereabouts.
Second escape attempt
The journey that Chung and his friend undertook to Seishin deepened his interest in civil engineering and instilled a strong sense of personal accomplishment. Upon returning to his home village of Gasan-ri in Tsūsen-gun, Chung began planning another attempt to leave, this time with the goal of reaching Keijō (formerly Hanseong, currently Seoul). In April 1933, Chung departed for Keijō with two companions.[3]
However, Chung and his remaining companion were deceived by an individual who falsely promised them employment but instead stole their money. Chung's father eventually located them, bringing the attempt to an end at his grandfather's nearby residence.[citation needed]
Third escape attempt
Chung returned to Asan, where he spent a year assisting his father on the family farm, but eventually found another opportunity to escape poverty. To finance his journey, he sold one of his father's cows and purchased a train ticket for 70 won.[3][5] Once he arrived in Keijō, Chung enrolled in a local bookkeeping school with the aim to start an accounting career. His father found him after two months and he returned to Gasan.
Rice merchant
In 1933, at age 18, Chung decided to make a fourth escape. He left during the night with a friend who was trying to escape a forced marriage. Once Chung reached the capital, he jumped at any job he could find. He worked first as a laborer at Jinsen Harbor (Incheon, currently in South Korea), as a construction worker at Boseong Professional School, and as a handyman for a starch syrup factory.[3][5]
After working at the factory for nearly a year, Chung landed a job as a deliveryman at the Bokheung Rice Store in Keijō.[3][5] Chung's new job offered room for advancement, and he decided to stay in a full-time role. He was allowed to manage the store's accounting after six months on the job.[citation needed]
In 1937, the store owner decided to give the store to Chung after becoming ill. At 22, Chung became the owner and renamed the store to Kyungil Rice Store.[3][5] The store was growing its profits until early 1939, when Japan, in its war efforts to secure rice supplies for the country and its military, imposed a rice-rationing system that forced Korean businesses out of the rice trade.[5]
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Career
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Pre-Hyundai
Chung returned to his village after his business failed and remained there until 1940, when he decided to try again in Keijō. Due to restrictions imposed on Koreans in certain industries by the Japanese colonial government, Chung entered the automobile repair business. Using a service garage he purchased from a friend, Chung started the A-do Service Garage on a 3,000 won loan. Within three years, the number of employees grew from 20 to 70. In 1943, the Japanese colonial government forced the garage to merge with a steel plant as part of the war effort.[3][5] Chung returned to Gasan with 50,000 yen in savings despite the Japanese shutting down his businesses.[3]
Hyundai (1946–1986)
In 1946, after the liberation of Korea from Japanese control, Chung launched Hyundai and Hyundai Civil Industries, anticipating the post-war reconstruction and industrialization. He obtained government contracts and became responsible for building much of South Korea's transportation infrastructure, including the Soyang Dam in 1967, the Gyeongbu Expressway in 1970, the world's largest[6] shipyard in Ulsan, and the Kori Nuclear Power Plant, among others. Chung also won contracts from the United States Forces Korea to build facilities for their personnel, leveraging his younger brother's proficiency in English and good relationship with U.S. Army engineers.[7]
During the North Korean invasion of 1950, Chung abandoned his construction projects and fled with his younger brother to Busan for safety. His son, Chung Mong-joon, was born there. Chung continued to build onto the company by gathering any kind of work he could get from the United Nations Command and the Korean Ministry of Transportation.[3] Once Seoul was retaken by U.N. forces, Chung reestablished the company and continued to obtain more work from the United States.
Chung continued to grow and diversify the company into one of South Korea's chaebols. He created the Ulsan shipyard. The first vessel was completed in three years (rather than the expected five) as Chung had the shipyard and vessel built simultaneously. He introduced the Hyundai Pony in 1975 and the Hyundai Excel in 1986. With the assistance of European and Japanese technology and facilities, by the early 1990s Hyundai had become "the only company in a developing country with the ability to design and manufacture its own engines:” [8]
In 1977, Chung founded the Asan Foundation with a scope of activities comparable to those of the Ford or Rockefeller foundations. The foundation was organized into four areas of service: medical support, social welfare, research and development, and a scholarship fund. The foundation established nine hospitals throughout South Korea, built Ulsan Medical College, and funded the Asan Life Sciences Research Institute. The foundation also initiated cooperative arrangements between industry and academic institutions by supporting such academic research as the Sinyoung Research Fund.[9]
From the 1980s until recently, the Hyundai Group was split into many satellite groups. In Seosan, he carried out a reclamation project, using a decommissioned oil tanker as a cofferdam.[10] In 1998, he herded 1,001 cows through the Korean Demilitarized Zone to North Korea, which he claimed was a repayment 1,000 times over for a cow he took to afford his ticket when he left his father's farm.[11] Chung was the first civilian to cross the Korean DMZ since the division of Korea.[12] He was the first to propose the Geumgangsan sightseeing excursions.[10] He founded the Hyundai Heavy Steel Company, which developed a non-dock ship-making method.[13]
In 1982, Chung received the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement.[14]
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Political career
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Chung is credited with successfully lobbying for South Korea to host the 1988 Summer Olympics. In 1992, the International Olympic Committee awarded Chung an IOC Medallion for his contributions to sports as a vehicle of international understanding.
Chung ran unsuccessfully as a Unification National Party presidential candidate for the 1992 South Korean presidential election. During this time, he was estimated to have a personal wealth of $4 billion, making him the richest man in Korea, though later estimates have placed him considerably lower.[15]
Chung also worked to normalize relations between the two Koreas. In 1998, at the age of 82, he worked with the South Korean government to provide economic assistance to North Korea. President Kim Dae-jung wanted to provide a $100 million donation as a way to jump-start economic development in North Korea under his Sunshine Policy. However, Kim could not find a legal way to transfer the funds. However, he persuaded Chung, who was already negotiating a large program with the North, to increase his investment by $100 million with money from secret loans provided by the government-controlled Korea Development Bank. The historic 2000 inter-Korean summit took place, with Chung traveling across the border in a motorcade of cars containing some 1001 "unification cows" as a gift to the North Korean people.[16]
Death
Chung died on March 21, 2001, at the age of 85 from pneumonia after receiving at-home treatment for other long-term illnesses.[17][18] He was buried in accordance to Buddhist and Confucian customary rites.[19] His wife, Byun Joong-seok, died on 17 August 2008, at the age of 88, due in part to long-term heart complications.[20] She was buried in a family graveyard in Hanam, alongside her husband and their son.[21]
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Legacy
Considered one of the most recognized and admired businessmen in Korean history, Chung's identity still pervades modern Korean society and industry. Business-related events emphasizing creativity and innovation have been named after him.[22] Chung's ideals are credited with much of Hyundai's current success, and the contemporary Hyundai leadership vow to keep them.[23]
Books
- Trials May Not Fail (시련은 있어도 실패는 없다)
- Born in This Land (이 땅에 태어나서)
- Your Lips Need to Burn: if You Plan to Succeed (입이 뜨거워야 성공할 수 있다)[24]
Family
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Chung Ju-yung had five brothers and one sister; he had eight sons and one daughter with his wife.[25] In addition, he had two daughters with a younger woman, with whom he started a relationship in 1973; these daughters were not acknowledged until after his death.[26][27]
Brothers
- Chung In-yung (1920–2006). After leaving the Hyundai Group, he founded the Halla Group, whose interests included Mando Machinery, Halla Cement, Halla Construction, Halla Heavy Industries, and Halla Climate Control Corp.[28][29]
- Chung Soon-Yung (1925–2015). After working for Hyundai Engineering & Construction, he ventured by taking Hyundai Cement with him to form the Sungwoo Business Group, which includes Hyundai Cement, Hyundai Welding, and Sungwoo Automotive.
- Chung Se-yung (1928–2005). Founder of Hyundai Motor. He later left the Hyundai Group, taking control of Hyundai Development Co., Ltd., a major housing builder in Korea.[30][31]
- Chung Shin-yung (1931–1962). Died in a car accident in Germany while working as a journalist for a Korean newspaper company. His only son, Chung Mong-hyuk, ran Hyundai Oilbank, the third largest oil refiner in Korea.
- Chung Sang-yung (1936–2021). Founder of the KCC Chemical (Keumkang) group, a major South Korean manufacturer of paints and glass products.
Children
This section needs additional citations for verification. (May 2019) |
- Chung Mong-pil (1934–1982). Died in a car accident in Gimcheon, in a Hyundai-built Ford Granada,[32] on the Gyeongbu Expressway leaving two daughters.
- Chung Mong-koo (1938–). Currently, the head of the Hyundai Kia Automotive Group, the second largest business group in Korea. Assumed control of Hyundai Engineering & Construction in 2011.[33]
- Chung Mong-kun (1942–). Currently, the chairman of the Hyundai Department Store Group, one of the largest retailers in South Korea.
- Chung Kyung-hee (1944–). The only daughter of Chung Ju-yung and Byeon Joong-seok.
- Chung Mong-woo (1945–1990). Committed suicide, leaving three sons. His oldest son Chung Il-sun is currently the president of BNG Steel, a member of the Hyundai Kia Automotive Group.
- Chung Mong-hun (1948–2003). Former chairman of the Hyundai Group and heir apparent to his father before he committed suicide in August 2003; this left his wife Hyun Jeong-eun (1956–) in control of the Hyundai Group.
- Chung Mong-joon (1951–). Politician and de facto owner of Hyundai Heavy Industries,[33] the world's largest shipbuilding firm, as well as vice-chairman of FIFA.
- Chung Mong-yoon (1955–). Chairman of Hyundai Marine & Fire Insurance,[34] Korea's third largest non-life insurer.
- Chung Mong-il (1959–). Former chairman of Hyundai Merchant Bank and Kangwon Bank.
- Chung Chung-in (Grace Jeong; 1979–), actress.[26][27]
- Chung Chung-im (Elizabeth Jeong; 1981–), advertiser.[26][27]
Nephews
via Chung In-yung (1920–2006)
- Chung Mong-guk.
- Chung Mong-won. Chairman of Halla Group. Recently reacquired Mando Machinery.
via Chung-Soon-yung (1925–2015)
- Chung Mong-sun. Chairman of Sungwoo Group (Hyundai Cement).
- Chung Mong-suk. Chairman of Hyundai Welding Co., Ltd.
- Chung Mong-hoon. Chairman of Sungwoo Hyokwang International Co.
- Chung Mong-yong. Chairman of Sungwoo Automotive.
via Chung Se-yung (1928–2005)
- Chung Mong-gyu. Former Chairman of Hyundai Motor. Current Chairman of Hyundai Development Co., Ltd.
via Chung Shin-yong (1931–1962)
- Chung Mong-hyuk. Former President of Hyundai Oil & Hyundai Petrochemical; current chairman of Hyundai Corporation.
via Chung Sang-yung (1936–)
- Chung Mong-jin. Chairman of KCC.
- Chung Mong-ik. Vice-chairman of KCC.
- Chung Mong-yeol. President of KCC Construction Co., Ltd.
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See also
- Lee Byung-chul (Founder of Samsung)
Notes and references
Further reading
External links
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