South Korea: Liberal Market Economy or Welfare State?

Rainer Zitelmann / 2019-06-29

South Korea’s pro-capitalists are primarily critical of what they see as a departure from capitalist principles.


At this year’s Cannes Film Festival, the South Korean director Bong Hoan-ho was awarded the coveted Palme d'Or for his satire Parasite. The film is an attack on capitalism: a poor family schemes its way into working as servants for a much richer one. But the intruders bear the unmistakable scent of people from a lower social strata. One of the film’s core messages is that it is almost impossible to bridge the gap between rich and poor.


Pro-Capitalist and Anti-Capitalist Movements


I haven’t seen the film yet, but it came up during an interview with the cultural editor of a respected Korean daily newspaper. The film, he said, shows that the poor and the rich are both psychologically deformed by capitalism. In the interview, he confronted me with the same extensive range of anti-capitalist stereotypes that are so popular in Western countries. I was left with no doubt: anti-capitalism has also made inroads in capitalist South Korea, where people are equally familiar with names like that of the French anti-capitalist critic Thomas Piketty.


In contrast to Europe, however, South Korea is also home to a strong, pro-capitalist counter-movement. As a result, it’s not all that surprising that the recently published Korean-language edition of my book, The Power of Capitalism, has attracted so much interest. South Korea’s pro-capitalists have totally embraced social media, especially YouTube. Channels like Pen & Mike (462,000 subscribers), Go-Sung-Gook TV (350,000 subscribers), and Sihn Ui Han Soo (733,000 subscribers) are very popular. Some of these YouTube channels are so well produced that they look and feel just like professional television channels.


Critics have accused President Moon Jae-in of the Democratic Party of Korea, who has been in power since May 2017, of pursuing anti-American policies and saying nothing in the face of human rights violations in North Korea. According to Sung-No Choi, president of the Center for Free Enterprise, the ruling Democratic Party is far more left-wing than Germany’s Social Democrats and the UK’s Labour Party. The party is clearly pursuing socialist policies. Since 2017 alone, Korea’s welfare spending has risen by 30 percent.


Critics like Choi are worried that South Koreans are forgetting the policies that fueled their country’s amazing success. As recently as the 1960s, South Korea was one of the poorest countries in the world, just like the poorest African countries today. Choi is convinced that the success of South Korea—today, the sixth strongest export nation in the world—is evidence of the success of capitalism. Choi is also president of the Hayek Society in South Korea, which organizes events and publishes books and YouTube videos to promote free-market economics.


Minimum Wage in South Korea


South Korea’s pro-capitalists are primarily critical of what they see as a departure from capitalist principles. A heated debate is now raging around the country’s minimum wage, which was introduced back in 1988 but has always remained very low. In recent years, however, it has risen dramatically. Critics fear that smaller companies, in particular, will no longer be able to pay the minimum wage if it climbs much higher. According to calculations from the Center for Free Enterprise, a 10-percent increase in the minimum wage would push unemployment up by between 0.7 and 0.8 percentage points.


Some of the criticism might seem somewhat strange from a Western European point of view. The Center for Free Enterprise points out that the government has reduced the maximum working week from 68 hours (plus 12 permitted overtime hours) to 52 hours per week. When I observed that the French only work 35 hours a week, critics of South Korea’s working time restrictions countered that entrepreneurs in Korea face up to two years in prison if their employees work longer than is permitted, which is often unavoidable, especially in smaller companies.


Nuclear energy is another major bone of contention. In 1990, nuclear energy accounted for 45 percent of South Korea’s energy supplies. Today it is just 23 percent. President Moon has already floated the idea of phasing out nuclear power completely, but he met strong opposition from his critics. Many of the current government’s biggest opponents are also supporters of Park Geun-hye, the daughter of Park Chung-hee, who is widely credited as being the father of the Korean economic miracle. His daughter served as president of South Korea from 2013 to 2017. She is now in prison after being convicted of corruption. However, the opposition forces believe she was wrongly convicted.


The libertarians I spoke to complained that Korea’s media is firmly in the grasp of left-wing ideologists. In Germany, the generation of “68ers” is held up as an enemy of economic liberalism; in South Korea, libertarians complain about the power held by those who were involved in the protest movement of the 1980s. Again and again, I was told how those in charge of politics and the media today became socialists during the student movement of the 1980s. When I pointed out that this was a legitimate protest movement against an autocratic, undemocratic system, my objection was countered with the argument that many of this movement’s leading protagonists are extremely sympathetic toward North Korea and are also anti-American.


Although South Korea has a completely different history and culture, many of the debates raging across the country have a distinctly “western” feel. The most heated discussions right now revolve around society and whether, as libertarians think, South Korea is moving too far down the road toward becoming a European welfare state, thereby betraying its capitalist principles—or whether, as their opponents think, welfare state reforms are urgently necessary to stop the gap between rich and poor from growing ever wider.


FEE 2019-06-29

https://fee.org/articles/south-korea-liberal-market-economy-or-welfare-state/

       

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