The Korea Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KCCI), which represents South Korean businesses, has called on lawmakers to carefully discuss bills that may greatly affect corporate management.

The KCCI on Monday said it had submitted a report to the National Assembly containing its constituents’ opinions on major legislative issues.

Citing its own survey, it said 284 bills were proposed in the three months from June to August following the opening of the 21st National Assembly, a 40 per cent increase compared with the previous assembly.

The KCCI said the bills, including one to revise the Commercial and Fair Trade Act, would have a significant impact on corporate management, making companies increasingly anxious about the legislation.

KCCI chairman Park Yong-maan told a press briefing on Monday that there should be more opportunities to review and discuss the adverse effects of the legislation and rational alternatives.

He said: “I understand that the purpose of the law revision is to correct unfair trade and prevent major shareholders from abusing their power.

“But there is a motive that causes it. If you ignore the motivation and interfere and regulate only the results, it will eventually create side effects.”

Park said issues, if possible, should be resolved through supervision based on market economy principles and there should be more discussion on the possibility of conflicts between the revised regulations.

In its report, the chamber of commerce demanded that a supplementary system be prepared for the separate selection of auditors.

The Assembly is now pushing for the separate election of an audit committee to ensure the independence of auditors. This is a system in which auditors are separately appointed instead of electing candidates selected by major shareholders.

The combined voting rights of the controlling shareholders would also be restricted to less than three per cent, thereby strengthening the authority of ordinary shareholders.

The KCCI said: “By severely restricting the company’s right to defend itself, the Korean government and the National Assembly will open the door wide for overseas speculative funds to propose candidates for the audit committee and enter the board of directors.”

To prevent that from happening, the chamber of commerce asked for the relaxation of the “three per cent rule” only when speculative funds try to enter the board of directors through shareholder proposals.

The KCCI also proposed an alternative to the expansion of regulations on internal transactions. As with the revised bill, the regulations would affect the holding companies – with a 72.7 per cent stake on average – suspected of unfair internal transactions.

However, due to the characteristics of holding companies, internal transactions between companies belonging to holding firms are relatively high, the business association said.

The government has been encouraging the introduction of holding companies, but if it now regulates them uniformly, it could lead to distrust in government policies, it said.

The chamber of commerce suggested: “Exceptions should be made for transactions between companies belonging to holding firms.”

In addition, the KCCI expressed concern over limiting voting rights for affiliates shares held by public corporations to within 15 per cent. It said this could even weaken the function of returning corporate profits to society.

The association suggested that a reliable institution regularly evaluate the activities of public corporations and exempt companies from regulation if they receive “appropriate” certification.

It also called for careful legislation on the Labour Union Act, which would allow laid-off and unemployed workers to join the union to ratify the International Labour Organisation’s key pact.

As the proposed revision could deepen the imbalance in power between labour and management by focusing on strengthening labour rights, companies should also raise their right to defend themselves to the level of advanced countries, the KCCI said.

As a supplementary measure to the revision of the Labour Union Act, the chamber of commerce demanded that laid-off and unemployed workers be banned from entering the workplace in principle, a ban on all types of occupation strikes and the removal of a ban on alternative work in the event of a strike.

THE KOREA HERALD/ASIA NEWS NETWORK