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Research Articles

Transfer of ‘Engineer’s Mind’: Kim Choong-Ki and the Semiconductor Industry in South Korea

Pages 83-108
Received 13 Aug 2018
Accepted 10 Jul 2019
Published online: 30 Jul 2019
 

ABSTRACT

By the mid-2000s, South Korea had become a dominant power in semiconductors, and by the mid-2010s, its worldwide market share of memory had climbed to over 60%. Many scholars have endeavored to discover the secret of the South Korean success but have usually emphasized the roles and contributions of the South Korean government and individual companies in the development of semiconductors, almost totally neglecting those of the South Korean academy. This article analyzes how the South Korean academy contributed to the development and success of the semiconductor industry by examining the life and work of Kim Choong-Ki of Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST). Beginning in 1975, Kim trained the first two generations of semiconductor engineers at KAIST, most of whom became the field’s leading figures in academia, at research institutes, and especially in industry. This study is not a biography of Kim but a critical analysis of how a university professor, not an entrepreneur, became the ‘godfather’ of the semiconductor industry in South Korea. I argue that this was only possible within South Korea’s unique triangular relationship among government, industry, and academia during the last quarter of the twentieth century.

Acknowledgments

I am very grateful to three anonymous reviewers and editors of Engineering Studies who carefully read the draft and provided me with critical and valuable comments for revision. I also thank Taemin Woo of KAIST who collected several important documents at KAIST archive and libraries.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.