Chang Dae-hwan

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Chang Dae-hwan
File:Dae-Whan CHANG7.jpg
Korean name
Hangul 장대환
Hanja 張大煥[1]
Revised Romanization Jang Daehwan
McCune–Reischauer Chang Taehwan

Chang Dae-hwan (also Chang Dae-whan; born 21 March 1952) is a South Korean businessman.[2] He is best known as the president of the Maeil Business Newspaper, South Korea's main business daily.[3] He also served a brief stint as South Korea's acting prime minister in August 2002 under president Kim Dae-jung, but the National Assembly voted not to confirm him.[4]

Education and career

Chang obtained a bachelor's degree in politics at the University of Rochester in 1973. He also received a diploma for the Study of EC (European Community) in Belgium in June 1974, and went on to do an M.A. in international affairs at George Washington University.[citation needed] Afterwards, Chang received his M.A. and Ph.D. in economics and management from New York University, where he wrote his 1987 doctoral dissertation on South Korean construction firms in the Middle East.[2][5] He serves as the president of the South Korean branch of the NYU alumni association.[6]

Chang started his newspaper career as a manager of planning department at Maeil Business Newspaper on 1 January 1986. He then rose to the position of director, managing director, and executive director successively, finally becoming the president and publisher in 1988.[citation needed]

Chang is a Commissioner for the Global Commission on Internet Governance.[7]

As prime minister

Chang was named as South Korea's acting PM on 9 August 2002, after the National Assembly declined to confirm his predecessor Chang Sang. The nomination was a surprise to fellow top-level civil servants in their 60s, as Chang was just 50 years old at the time, and had no experience in government.[8] If appointed, he would have been the wealthiest member of the cabinet, with 5.6 billion in family assets, according to his self-report.[9] However, during his confirmation hearings, Grand National Party (GNP) members including Hong Joon-pyo and Ahn Kyung-ryul expressed their opposition.[10][11] Chang himself also acknowledged in a press conference that he had falsely registered himself as living in Seoul's Gangnam-gu to enroll his son in a better school.[10] In the end he was rejected by a vote of 151-112.[4]

References

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  7. https://www.ourinternet.org/#commission
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