ABSTRACT

For many years up until 1997, Korea was widely seen in economic and financial circles as something of a miracle. The financial crisis that Korea experienced then did much to set its economy back, but by 2001 it was still the 13th largest economy in terms of GDP in the world.
This enticing collection, with contributions from experts with an impressive knowledge of Korea and its economy, charts not only the well documented causes of the crisis, but more importantly, its response and recovery from it. With an admirable scholarly rigour, the book covers such topics as:
*the origin and evolution of the Korean economic system and its special factors including chaebols
*Korean industries since the crisis
*What happened to the money after the capital flight of the crisis and did the USA benefit?
"The Korean Economy at the" "Crossroads" is intended and recommended not only for students and academics involved in international finance, economics and Asian studies, but also for the business leaders and policy makers who can draw lessons from the books important analyses.

chapter 1|18 pages

The Korean economy

Triumphs, difficulties, and triumphs again?

chapter 2|22 pages

The Asian financial crisis 1

Genesis and exegesis

chapter 7|24 pages

Financial reporting of selected Korean listed companies

Disclosure practices

chapter 8|26 pages

The chaebol and Korean capitalism

The Hyundai business group

chapter 10|22 pages

The financial system in Korea after the 1997 financial crisis

A legal perspective

chapter 12|15 pages

The Korean steel industry after the economic crisis 1

Challenges and opportunities

chapter 13|18 pages

Restructuring of the public enterprise after the crisis

The case of deposit insurance fund

chapter 15|30 pages

Asia crisis postmortem 1

Where did the money go and did the United States benefit?

chapter 17|21 pages

The role of FDI in the recovery of the financial crisis in Korea

The bilateral economic relationship between Korea and Australia under APEC

chapter 18|15 pages

Korea's FTA policy

Background and current progress 1