▶주메뉴 바로가기

▶본문 바로가기

The Korea Herald
검색폼

THE INVESTOR
November 30, 2024

Market Now

Samsung chief meets Japanese business leaders

  • PUBLISHED :July 06, 2022 - 09:35
  • UPDATED :July 06, 2022 - 09:35
  • 폰트작게
  • 폰트크게
  • facebook
  • sms
  • print

Samsung Electronics Vice Chairman Lee Jae-yong (Yonhap)

Samsung Electronics Vice Chairman Lee Jae-yong held meetings with Japanese business leaders who were staying in Seoul this week to attend the annual gathering of the Korea-Japan Business Council, according to the tech giant on Tuesday.

Lee, the de facto leader of Samsung, on Monday had dinner with Masakazu Tokura, chairman of Sumitomo Chemical who doubles as chairman of Keidanren, or the Japan Business Federation. He also held a luncheon meeting Tuesday with Toshiaki Higashihara, chairman of Hitachi and vice chairman of Keidanren.

The Federation of Korean Industries, together with its Japanese counterpart Keidanren, has held the Korea-Japan Business Council meeting every year since 1982. The last two meetings, however, were canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Lee who studied management at Keio University in Tokyo boasts an extensive personal network in Japan. Despite Samsung’s tiny market share in Japan’s smartphone and TV markets, it has maintained close ties with local telecom carriers like NTT Docomo and KDDI, the clients of its 5G network equipment.

Even though Samsung declined to further elaborate on the meetings, the business leaders are believed to have discussed ways to promote exchanges between the two countries and bolster the partnership on supply chain disruptions.

Lee’s meeting with the visiting Keidanren leaders comes amid budding efforts of the Yoon Suk-yeol government to mend soured ties with Japan over wartime history and trade.

Back in 2019, when a series of court rulings here were made in favor of Korean victims of forced labor and sex slavery during Japan’s colonial rule of Korean Peninsula in 1910-45, Japan resisted heavily by imposing an export ban on key materials for Korea’s chip and display industries.

Samsung, the world’s largest memory chip maker, was one of the companies hit hardest by the export restrictions.

By Lee Ji-yoon (jylee@heraldcorp.com)

EDITOR'S PICKS