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for export promotion. The most important component of the second stage of reforms was the formation of
chaebols, which played a special role in the development of export potential. These South Korean
conglomerates, created with the active support of the state, have become pillars of the foreign economic
development of the national economy. So, in 1969, the Electronic Industry Promotion Act was adopted,
which gave conglomerates access to external capital and domestic loans, and also provided preferential
taxation and priority in the development of infrastructure projects.
Having embarked on the path of export-oriented development, South Korea from the early 1960s to
the mid-1970s pursued a policy of severe import restrictions. Its priority tasks were to protect the interests of
the national manufacturer and meet the needs of export industries in the necessary industrial equipment, as
well as raw materials, semi-finished products and components. By signing an agreement to join the GATT in
1967, South Korea managed to maintain significant quantitative import restrictions until 1975. But since the
second half of the 1970s, in the foreign economic policy of the Republic of Korea, a new stage begins,
characterized by the gradual liberalization of imports. The next stage in the liberalization of South Korean
import policy was the preparation of national economy in 1989-94 to the modification of the rules of
international trade in the context of the transformation of the GATT into the WTO. The government
measures of that period assumed: the regulation of tariffs, that is, the elimination of import preferences for
individual companies, a decrease in the average tariff burden on importers. Import tariffs were reduced, but
businesses that met the established export quotas gained access to subsidized loans and other benefits. By
lowering the quantitative restrictions on the import of foreign goods, South Korea closed a 30 -year phase of
protectionist policies and adopted an economic strategy for greater openness [7]. With the exception of the
remaining limits on the import of agricultural products, import restrictions now apply to only a small
segment of goods and services (medicines and cosmetics). Exports grew at a very high rate - in 1963-1969
the average annual growth was 35%, while imports grew by an average of 22% annually. However, it should
be noted that throughout this period, net exports remained negative with an average level of -6.9% of GDP in
1962-1971. Maintaining such a persistent and significant foreign trade deficit required an inflow of external
capital - first financial aid, then investment and debt.
By virtue of its peculiarities - the most favored nation treatment and the amendment on the least
developed countries - the GATT made it possible for Korea, as a developing country, to simultaneously
combine openness in trade with industrial protectionism. In particular, by gaining access to the markets of
developed countries and transporting its goods at reduced rates of customs duties, Korea maintained high
protective duties on imported manufactured goods, using the “emerging industries” argument often used by
emerging economies in the 1970-1980s.
Since joining the WTO in 1996, Korea has made tangible progress here, lowering the average
applied rates from 20% to 9.8% on manufactured goods and from 72.4% to 58% on agricultural goods
between 1996 and 2018 [8]. In the WTO system, Korea has also rather successfully defended its right to
developing country status, which provided it with more flexible tariff reduction schemes and longer
transition periods for weak sectors of the economy, especially agriculture, the service sector and the
protection of intellectual property rights.
After using the multiple exchange rate required to form before the early 1960s a closed self-
sufficient economy with the adoption of an export-oriented development course after the devaluation of the
national currency - won, a single exchange rate was established at which exporters sold currency to the
Central Bank. In 1965-74, the policy of maintaining a floating exchange rate was pursued, and in order to
maintain the preferred ratio between exports and imports for the economy, the won was devalued several
times during these years. Since March 1990, South Korea has set the market rate for the won, keeping its
monetary policy unchanged since then.
In the 1960s and 70s, the South Korean government initiated the emergence of export industrial
zones as a mechanism for debugging interaction with foreign investors in the creation of specialized export
industries.
The next stage in the formation of an effective state system of export support was carried out in the
early 1990s, when new elements of the export support infrastructure were created. It included the Korea
Trade Insurance Corporation (K-SURE). In addition, the Export-Import Bank of Korea (KEXIM), operating
since 1978, opened 9 representative offices in Southeast Asia, Latin America, as well as in London, Moscow
and Washington. As a result, in 1995, the export of the Republic of Korea exceeded the $ 100 billion. A
country without significant natural resources, destroyed by war, with a per capita income of less than $ 100
in 1962, reached $ 10,000 by 1995, and the average annual GDP growth was 10%.
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