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Saenuri urges more chaebol controls

June 20, 2016 - 17:13 By Korea Herald
The ruling Saenuri Party on Monday called for strengthened supervision on conglomerates’ lax management and tax-evading power succession practices as part of a long-term vision to achieve social compromise and lessen inequality.

By prioritizing distribution over growth and advocating the rights of irregular workers, the conservative party gestured at expanding its political horizon to the centrist-reformist zone.

“A nation that is not just may not stand straight,” said floor leader Rep. Chung Jin-suk in a speech as the parliamentary negotiating unit representative.

His speech, “A greater Republic of Korea, built on social compromise,” largely focused on the need to achieve compromise in the labor market so as to reduce widening economic inequality.

“So far, the Saenuri Party has focused on enlarging the pie, but the issue of distribution has slipped from its priority list,” the whip said.

Saenuri Party whip Rep. Chung Jin-suk delivers a speech in front of National Assembly Speaker Chung Sye-kyun on Monday. Park Hae-mook/The Korea Herald
Pointing out that the top 10 percent account for half of the nation’s total income, the Saenuri lawmaker said growing inequality will harm Korea’s long-term future.

“We should raise the alarm on lax family-centered management practices of conglomerates,” he added.

He thereby quoted the example of the feud-ridden Lotte Group, which is embroiled in a power struggle among founder Shin Kyuk-ho and his two sons Shin Dong-joo and Shin Dong-bin.

“Capitalism values ownership, but it doesn‘t mean that a (conglomerate) owner is entitled to cast all power to family members at will.”

The lawmaker also called for “grand social compromise” in the labor market, referring to the recent death of a 19-year-old maintenance worker at a Seoul subway station.

“Should the labor unions in conglomerates and public sectors continue to hold on to their vested rights, youths and irregular workers will continue to suffer,” he said.

He thereby called for an in-depth investigation into Seoul Metro, the state-run subway operator in charge of supervising the maintenance company, as well as the financially struggling Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering, which is looking to government funds for restructuring.

Chung’s reformist remarks came in the wake of the party’s recent leadership feuds between those close to President Park Geun-hye and others calling for more fundamental reform.

At the center of the conflict was Rep. Yoo Seung-min, whose return was a matter of dispute between the two in-party groups. The former pro-Park party floor leader, after losing the favor of the Blue House over a disputed parliamentary bill, defected from the party to run in the April 13 general election as an independent candidate.

Last week’s decision to reinstate Yoo rekindled the factional divide within the party, with floor leader Chung locking horns with pro-Park interim leader Kim Hee-ok. The two reached a breakthrough over the weekend, after which Kim ended his three-day boycott and resumed party affairs.

But despite Rep. Chung’s move to shift the political agenda to labor reforms, the party’s internal strife persisted on Monday as the pro-Park members demanded for the resignation of the party’s Secretary-General Kweon Seong-dong, holding him responsible for the reinstating procedure.

By Bae Hyun-jung (tellme@heraldcorp.com)