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Special Lecture by Gyeonggi Province Governor Kyung-pil Nam Held…"Rebuilding Korea"
2016.11.22 Views 3207 경영대학
KUBS Special Lecture
Special Lecture by Gyeonggi Province Governor Kyung-pil Nam Held…"Rebuilding Korea"
Special Lecture by Gyeonggi Province Governor Kyung-pil Nam Held…"Rebuilding Korea"
On November 9 at 10:30 AM, Gyeonggi Province Governor Kyung-pil Nam delivered his special lecture “Rebuilding Korea” at SUPEX Hall in LG-POSCO Building. The lecture was held as part of the “Business Negotiation” and “Organizational Behaviors” courses offered at Korea University Business School (KUBS). “Leadership and negotiation are major components in politics,” KUBS Professor Seungwoo Kwon said, explaining the reasons for inviting the guest speaker. “I hope this lecture will act as a trigger to think about governance and political leadership.”
Gyeonggi Province Governor Kyung-pil Nam
Governor Nam has examined Korea is facing financial calamity and emphasized to create the value of the “Global Standard.”
“Although the U.S. hits one trillion dollars of budget deficit and one trillion dollars of trade deficit every year, its economy will not collapse due to the U.S. dollar,” Governor Nam said. “The U.S. dollar is not simply currency but used as the global monetary standard.”
Developed countries create standards, not products. The prime example is Apple smartphones. Apple developed a new platform called “smartphone” by installing web browsing and other advanced functions to basic mobile phones. Such development has changed the lives of millions of people all over the world. “We make products while Apple does not. This is the difference between one who creates standards and one who follows the standards.” Governor Nam added.
He provided the “Power-Sharing through Governance” as a political standard model –believing that sharing power allows maintaining of a transparent system, thereby eradicating political corruption. “Gyeonggi Province Vice Governor and I are in different parties. In other words, corruptions and irregularities cannot arise as each political party discusses with one another and uses the Gyeonggi Province System which opens all meeting processes to residents in real-time,” Governor Nam told.
Governor Nam believes that the power structure of the new era should be in a way where the president builds close relationships with ministers along with continuous discussions. This will accelerate the passage of a bill because ministers have an obligation to convince their own political party. “We cannot communicate without sharing power. Nothing would be more dangerous than voicing different opinions in the same government,” he continued.
In economic areas, Governor Nam stressed the “Shared Market Economy Model,” which is the combination of freedom and sharing. The economic system has to change. The Shared Market Economy Model allows the nation and communities to support platforms while companies use the provided platforms. Communities are responsible for a product’s entrance fee, marketing cost, logistic fee, etc.
He gave an example of Donald Trump explaining that if the neo-monopoly continues, it is possible that there can be a next Trump. The lives of enraged citizens must fundamentally change. Governor Nam used potato chips as an example to explain the Shared Market Economy Model.
“Gyeonggi-do Corporation provides platforms, enabling companies to compete with pure products only, and all companies have to do is utilize these platforms. Through a sharing platform, the cost of potato chips has decreased from 3,300 won to 900 won. This is the structure that “public” stands as a platform while private companies create an economic ecosystem.
“The key to future communication is sharing. I hope all of you will become a leader preparing for the future,” Governor Nam said at the end of his lecture.
“It takes 1,000 years to change culture and society whereas changing a system takes only 10 years,” said KUBS Dean Soo Young Kwon, who attended the lecture. “Based on today’s lecture, I look forward to seeing our society change within 10 years.”
“Although the U.S. hits one trillion dollars of budget deficit and one trillion dollars of trade deficit every year, its economy will not collapse due to the U.S. dollar,” Governor Nam said. “The U.S. dollar is not simply currency but used as the global monetary standard.”
Developed countries create standards, not products. The prime example is Apple smartphones. Apple developed a new platform called “smartphone” by installing web browsing and other advanced functions to basic mobile phones. Such development has changed the lives of millions of people all over the world. “We make products while Apple does not. This is the difference between one who creates standards and one who follows the standards.” Governor Nam added.
He provided the “Power-Sharing through Governance” as a political standard model –believing that sharing power allows maintaining of a transparent system, thereby eradicating political corruption. “Gyeonggi Province Vice Governor and I are in different parties. In other words, corruptions and irregularities cannot arise as each political party discusses with one another and uses the Gyeonggi Province System which opens all meeting processes to residents in real-time,” Governor Nam told.
Governor Nam believes that the power structure of the new era should be in a way where the president builds close relationships with ministers along with continuous discussions. This will accelerate the passage of a bill because ministers have an obligation to convince their own political party. “We cannot communicate without sharing power. Nothing would be more dangerous than voicing different opinions in the same government,” he continued.
In economic areas, Governor Nam stressed the “Shared Market Economy Model,” which is the combination of freedom and sharing. The economic system has to change. The Shared Market Economy Model allows the nation and communities to support platforms while companies use the provided platforms. Communities are responsible for a product’s entrance fee, marketing cost, logistic fee, etc.
He gave an example of Donald Trump explaining that if the neo-monopoly continues, it is possible that there can be a next Trump. The lives of enraged citizens must fundamentally change. Governor Nam used potato chips as an example to explain the Shared Market Economy Model.
“Gyeonggi-do Corporation provides platforms, enabling companies to compete with pure products only, and all companies have to do is utilize these platforms. Through a sharing platform, the cost of potato chips has decreased from 3,300 won to 900 won. This is the structure that “public” stands as a platform while private companies create an economic ecosystem.
“The key to future communication is sharing. I hope all of you will become a leader preparing for the future,” Governor Nam said at the end of his lecture.
“It takes 1,000 years to change culture and society whereas changing a system takes only 10 years,” said KUBS Dean Soo Young Kwon, who attended the lecture. “Based on today’s lecture, I look forward to seeing our society change within 10 years.”