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THE COUP d'ETAT MODEL: Public broadcasting UNDER CONTROL Shin Dong Kim CIC Visiting Student The University of Chicago & Ph.D. Candidate in Telecommunications Indiana University, Bloomington Paper submitted to the International Communication Division, AEJMC 80th annual convention, Chicago, IL, July 30-August 2, 1997. Author Contact: Shin Dong Kim 4800 S Lake Park #1209 Chicago, IL 60615 Phone & fax: 773.285.9337 e-mail: [log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask] THE COUP d'ETAT MODEL: Public broadcasting UNDER CONTROL Introduction Beginning with the year 1980, the media system of Korea underwent a radical change in their ownership and structure. Media consolidation, or Ollon T`ongp`yehap, a measure of consolidating and rearranging newspapers and broadcasting companies, erased many media organizations and workers off the stage of the nation's mass communication. This measure was only possible by a violent oppression of coup regime, which needed a fast and complete control of the nation's whole media system in its attempt to overthrow the government and prevent people from forming anti-coup force. For Korean journalists and broadcasters, the year 1980 is inscribed with a bitter memory of press repression. It was one of the most terrible years of tragic political drama in contemporary Korean history. After the collapse of 18-year long dictatorship of president Park Chung Hee in late 1979, the year 1980 began with so-called the "Spring of Seoul" indicating a revitalization of democratic political process, which had been severely suppressed under Park's Yusin regime. During the development years of 1960s and 1970s, Park's authoritarian regime was to some extent quite successful in achieving economic development, though the seemingly miraculous industrialization was achieved largely based on exploiting low-cost labors and in the sacrifice of human rights and political democracy. Following Park's death in 1979, the strong aspiration for political democracy exploded like a live volcano throughout the country. The sudden and abnormal conclusion of dictatorship (Park was assassinated by Kim Jae-gyu , then the head of the Korean Central Intelligence Agency.), however, left a political vacuum behind it, and this was promptly exploited by General Chun Doo Hwan to launch a coup which eventually turned the country's political clock decades back in terms of the development of democracy. Chun's illegitimacy developed even worse when he brutally quelled the Kwangju Uprising by dispatching military troops and left the city of then 600,000 people in bloodbath with some 200 civilian deaths. The Kwangju Uprising was indeed the nation's greatest tragedy since the Korean War in 1950. Accordingly the incident has never forgotten by many Koreans and has remained as one of the most persistent sources of political controversy as well as anti-government protests up to the early 1990s. For the illegitimate dictator, controlling nation's media at his will was an urgent necessity along with other repressive settlements to stabilize power base. In fact the media had already been in tight control since the death of president Park under the Martial Law. Even the war-like Kwangju Uprising which lasted for ten days was never reported by any news media due to the complete control laid on virtually all kind of news media by Chun's coup regime (Kim Shin Dong 1993). To grasp a tight control on media, Chun promptly installed a series of measures by sacking journalists, changing the media law, and establishing new institutions and hierarchies. In the beginning of 1980, the television of Korea was comprised of one public television network (Korean Broadcasting System) and two private-owned commercial networks (Munhwa Broadcasting Company and Tongyang Broadcasting Company) in 1980. As the Chun's regime imposed the Basic Press Act in the late 1980, the two commercial television networks were reorganized as parts of a unified public broadcasting system along with the existing public television, Korean Broadcasting System and other radio stations. TBC was merged into KBS becoming the KBS2 and MBC maintained its name while KBS turned into KBS1. The government also created an educational television channel KBS3. The rationale of this transformation of broadcasting system was creating a public service system modeled after Western Europe. No prior discussions regarding the reform of television system had ever existed before the legislation of the Basic Press Act in 1980. It was reported that the private owners of television and radio companies voluntarily offered their companies to the state in a total agreement on public interest cause. In fact, it was simply not true. The owners of those media were deprived of their properties by force and could not say a word on the measure until Chun's regime collapsed in late 1980s. Thereafter the era of public broadcasting in Korea began. From the start, there was not much to believe that the new system would be genuinely public. Whether it would be a truly public or not, however, it is important to note that a large-scale institutional transformation of television system which happened in the midst of political upheaval of 1980, precisely reflected characteristics of the repressive coup d'etat politics. Furthermore, the 1980's formation of the public broadcasting system, which initially viewed as a tentative system of media control, was perpetuated throughout the whole period of the Fifth Republic as the system was stabilized and routinized through newly installed regulatory institutions such as the Korean Broadcasting Commission. The focus of current paper is on elucidating the nature and process of the systemic transformation of the Korean broadcasting since 1980. It has been one of the main arguments of the political economic approach in media studies that the existence and performance of any media system in a capitalist society is generally conditioned, if not determined, by the economic system of the given society. Different from this proposition, the transformation of the Korea's television system in 1980 shows that it was decisively political rather than economic that had driven and shaped the change of media system. The establishment of public broadcasting system driven by a political cause, however, brought about a paradox of economic advantage by providing an institutional basis of capital accumulation on the part of television industry. Interestingly, this financial growth of television companies during the early 1980s was not a main purpose, if not unintended, of the consolidation of broadcasting system. My major argument here is that the Korean state's repressive media policy in early 1980s was basically formed by the need of illegitimate coup d'etat which aimed at using all media systems for political propaganda, however, for the media which compromised their public role with dictator's need, the period proved to be a golden opportunity to rise as big corporation with massive amounts of capital accumulation. It was the state that created a political and legal condition, which made the television system to serve the coup group's immediate interest. But, the state's protection of monopolized television industry had unintended consequences for those who promoted it, creating a new set of conditions that could not have been predicted by policymakers. Here, my analysis is confined to the transformation of Korean television system in relation with the nation's radical political change, a military coup, and the expansion of television industry as an unintended consequence of the coup d'etat formation of media system. In the following, I first review some theoretical issues and propose an analytical model for this study. Next, I survey the political context in which an extremely repressive state intervention on media was possible, and then investigate strategies and tactics that the state employed in its effort to strengthen the control of media. I argue that the phenomenal growth of the state monopoly public television system resulted a policy outcome which might be termed, in a retrospective sense, as a state market formation/growth policy, even if the financial growth of television system was not the first priority of the state policy on media. The coup d'etat formation of media system Studies on mass communications have well placed media in relation with political factors such as political process, political change, the type of government, elections, etc. In fact, some divisions of media studies such as political communication, media policy, political economy, etc. are particularly devoted to the study on relationships of media and politics, its impact on political process, and policies of media system. Despite there is a wide range of difference in terms of political factors among countries, not much have been researched on the making of media system in radical political changes. One of the reasons may be found from a social and political situation of media studies itself where most of studies have been done in advanced democratic societies. For example, in the United States where the studies on political communication has been carried out most vigorously, the main threshold of studies is focused on rather stable political process, narrowing the scope of study down to relationships between media and voting behavior, public opinion, agenda-setting, and so on. While these studies certainly have their own merits in viewing the function of media in such a political formation, theories produced from the kind of soil often expose weaknesses when applied to other countries where political factors are arranged in different configuration. Unlike the advanced democratic countries, the nature of political change tend to be more radical and dynamic (or less institutionalized) in many less developed nations. It is also true that revolutions and coups are forming rather a normal type of political change in these countries when they are largely perceived as "improbable" by the citizens of democratic society. As in the democracy, however, the roles and functions of media are also crucial in a non-democratic political process, while the actual contents of those roles and functions are quite different from each other. One of the theories that might be useful in viewing the roles and functions of media in a society of radical political change such as coup is found from Herman and Chomsky's propaganda model (1988, 1-35). In proposing their propaganda model of mass media, they argue that the mass media in societies where the power belongs to state bureaucracy and large capital, serve the ends of a dominant elite. Elaborating their propaganda model, they specify five ingredients or "filters" which make the media to function as a device of dichotomization of messages and propaganda campaigns. These five filters include: i. concentrated ownership and profit-orientation of the dominant media; ii. advertising as the primary income source of the mass media; iii. heavy reliance of media on information provided by government and business; iv. flak as a means of disciplining the media; and v. anticommunism as a control mechanism. Following the conceptual formulation of the propaganda model, Herman and Chomsky give a well documented cases of media control in that how media are controlled by and serve for the interests of bureaucratic power and capitalists both in the United States and Third World countries. Assuming a direct and powerful effect of media, the model renders some usefulness in viewing the role of media in a coup process in which all media are tightly seized by coup force. In a social situation where media system is tightly controlled by the state and a small group of capitalists, the propaganda effect of media can be direct and enormous. Furthermore, it is not only the media system but also all other social sectors that are under direct control and intervention of the state in a coup situation. Despite their numerous illustrations on political violence on media, especially in Third World countries, Herman and Chomsky do not seem to succeed in bringing the brutal as well as illegitimate political actions of the state into their conceptualization of the model. With the five filters of the propaganda model, taken simply as they are termed as 'filters', the model is more applicable to advanced capitalist societies than less developed countries. The first filter of the model, according to their theory, could be summarized as concentration of ownership and profit-orientation of the dominant media. This is very much an economically skewed generalization, whereas in fact media systems in less developed societies are frequently under state ownership and thereby not necessarily profit-oriented as they would normally be in capitalist countries. More importantly, in a situation where a stable political process is denied by violent interventions of military groups, concentration of ownership, profit-orientation, reliance on advertising, flaks, etc., could only be minor factors that shape the formation of media-state relationship. On the contrary, the violent characteristics of coup d'etat politics in which terror of power rules almost all aspects of social dynamics need to be counted for in full consideration. Having the propaganda model in mind, I propose a coup d'etat formation model of media system (hereafter coup model) to examine the case of Korean television in early 1980s. In 1980, the military coup d'etat led by an army general Chun Doo Hwan immediately formed an emergent political situation in which all normal political procedure could not function in the way that they should have done. As researchers on coup unanimously point out the importance of media in the execution of coups (Ferguson 1987; Luttwak 1968; O'Kane 1987), one of the most urgent task for the coup launchers was to seize the nation's media system to justify their illegal action as well as to shield themselves (and their coup) from a possible counter-action from the government or any other anti-coup forces. As Luttwak pointed out in his study on coup (1968, 118-119), "control over the flow of information emanating from the political centre is the most important weapon in establishing authority after the coup. The seizure of the main means of mass communication is thus a task of crucial importance" (quoted with a slight change in style). However, the seizure of a nation's media system is not a simple task as it may sound. Even in a country of small size, there are multiple outlets especially in the case of radio and television facilities. Furthermore, for the coup launchers, the objective is not merely to seize the facilities but to "monopolize the flow of information", which means a total control over all media (Luttwak, 119). The control of media is crucial factor not only in successfully launching a coup but also in stabilizing the unauthorized power after the coup. Coup d'Etat Model of Media Control Comparing with the five filters of the propaganda model, the coup model may also have to secure at least three following ingredients: i. Concentration of ownership; ii. Control of information source; iii. Anticommunism (or other forms of national ideology) as a control mechanism; iv. Source of income that can solve a funding problem. Unlike the propaganda model, flak is not really a matter in the coup model since media is already under direct control of the state. During the early years of 1980s, the Fifth Republic's media policy was precisely a case of replication of these four ingredients. As a coup regime, which lacked political legitimacy, the foremost goal of media control was given on legitimation of the regime while excluding opponents' access to the media. Table 1. Coup model and propaganda model Coup model Propaganda model Filters or ingredients Ownership Source control Ideological shield funding State State Anticommunism Corporate capital in state supervision Media moguls Corporate capital, state Anticommunism Corporate capital in competition Major actors State policing agencies (military, police, etc.); corporate capitals as advertisers; media firms as collaborators; formal regulatory agencies (KBC, KOBACO, etc.) Media firms; corporate capitals both as media owners and advertisers; state regulatory agencies (FCC) and government Enforcing mechanism Omnipotent state power; terrorism in politics (intimidation, torture, etc.); appeasement (material rewards, promotion; legal device (Basic Press Act) Market competition; selective leaking; regulations favoring corporate media; potentially violent state power; flaks Outcome Blocking flow of information; Ideological machine of state, monopolized broadcasting enterprise "dichotomization", Ideological machine of state and capital, monopolized / oligopolized media market As shown in Table 1, however, the two models have quite a difference in terms of their actual contents of filters, actors, mechanisms, and outcomes. While the propaganda model depends more on corporate capital in the filtering process, the coup model emphasizes state that controls corporate capital itself. Anticommunism was a useful ingredient in both models especially under the Cold War formation of international politics.[1] With its bitter experience of civil war against communist North Korea in 1950, and continuing division of nation for half a century, anticommunism has been a crucial national ideology in the South Korean politics. One of the justifications of the coup that the Chun regime propagated was to protect the country from the possible invasion of the North. Chun's coup regime actually sacked intellectuals and opposition politicians by labeling them as communists or collaborators to communists. State and capital are major actors in both models; however, the dominance of state is remarkable in the coup model. As a social organization, to use Max Weber's definition, which "claims the monopoly of the legitimate use of physical force", the state exercises its coercive power in advanced capitalist societies as well as less developed countries[2]. In the case of coup politics, however, the coup group's use of violence is hardly legitimate. If the use of overt physical violence tends to be minimized in a stabilized polity, it is omnipotence of coup state power that rules the unstable political situation with visible and intimidating violence. Applying its brutal violence openly, the coup state creates a mechanism of enforcement by which it boldly brings media institutions under its tight control. Even if the outcome of media control, i.e., the ideological machinization of media and monopolization/oligopolization of market, is similar in both models, the mechanisms through which the state or capital achieve effects are quite different one another. It is the omnipotent and omnipresent state power that best characterizes the enforcing mechanism of coup state. In the following sections, I examine how these ingredients were actually developed in the forms of institutions and practices. As a measure of concentrating ownership, the coup state of 1980 enforced the so-called Ollon t`ongp`yehap, or media consolidation. Issuing Podo chich`im, or report guidelines was another measure of controlling information source. Media workers were sacked in the name of cleanup campaign. And massive amounts of capital earned from the monopolized advertising market resulted in broadcasting giants. But before I go into these, an overview of early 1980's violent political situation, which made the radical and crazy media transformation possible, seems to be required. Terror of coup d'etat politics Following the President Park's assassination in late 1979, the politics of Korea in 1980 was a highly volatile situation with hope for democracy and fear of social disorder. The sudden death of long-time dictator brought about a political break in which a regular routine of political process was unable to be carried out. Considering a legal procedure, the emergent situation should have immediately been put in order by the administration led by then the Prime Minister Choi Kyu-ha, however, tamed by a strong one-man system for decades, the proxy administration was utterly incapable of managing the crisis. Exploiting this power vacuum, in December 12, 1979, a group of military generals led by Chun Doo Hwan launched a coup and succeeded to seize power. Chun's position at the time was the commander of military intelligence agency, which was responsible in investigating President Park's assassination. After launching the so-called 12.12 coup, Chun designate himself as the head of the Korea Central Intelligence Agency (KCIA) in April, 1980 while keeping his original post, which practically meant a full control over the nation's 'instruments of violence' and information. The scope of activity of the Korea Central Intelligence Agency, founded in 1961 with American CIA help, penetrated into every arena of Korean life. Indeed it was 'the supreme state agency' as characterized by a Korean political scientist (Cumings 1989: 10). Making himself the head of the supreme state agency, Chun's subsequent moves were ultra-constitutional. As the political process following the death of Park showed little progress toward democratization and the suspicious move of Chun's military group became more visible, the voices of students, intellectuals, and politicians requesting the government's prompt normalization became louder. Assemblies and demonstrations were held across the nation. General Chun's hard-line policy especially led to a sharp confrontation in Kwangju, a city of then six hundred thousand people and the scene of an uprising and bloodbath between May 18 and 27. The Kwangju Uprising became a significant landmark not only in the struggle for democracy but also in the process of the formation of Chun regime. After killing its own people by using the nation's own military force, Chun's regime was left with nothing to fear anymore. The politics of terror openly began. Having suppressed the Kwangju Uprising with brute force, Chun further tightened his grip on the government. On May 31, 1980, the Special Committee for National Security Measures was created for the ostensible purpose of "aiding the president (Choi Kyu-ha) in directing and supervising martial law affairs and to examine national policies." The 25-member committee, which was headed by the president himself, included principal cabinet members, chiefs of staff, and nine generals of Chun's cohort, but this committee was not to be the supreme organ of power. It was the 31-member Standing Committee of the Special Committee headed by Chun himself, included 18 field-level officers on active duty plus 12 high-level government officials, that actually controlled the affairs of state. This junta council, or the "Kukbowi" as the Special Committee known, reportedly aroused deep fear and awe among population since one of the 13 subcommittee was in charge of 'cleansing' society and the polity, and was a law unto itself. It was this Special Committee that initiated and managed the reorganization of press including broadcasting in 1980. Executed by the so-called 'press team' under the military intelligence command, the Special Committee purged large number of media workers, closed or took media firms, and began to issue report guidelines which was continued throughout Chun's regime. Political and economic control of television was institutionalized through newly established organizations such as the Korean Broadcasting Commission, the Korea Broadcast Advertising Corporation, and so on. In such a short time period, under the threat of brutal violence and terror, the nation's whole media system promptly went under the control of coup group. Media consolidation and the birth of public broadcasting system The so-called 'New Military Group (Sin kunbu)' which initiated the coup in 1979 and 1980[3] approached media in two levels to bring the system under their control: personnel level and institutional level. Winning leading journalists over to their side and sacking dissident journalists was one of the first job for the NMG in their attempt to control the media. On institutional level, NMG pushed a legislation of Basic Press Act, establishment of public broadcasting system, creation of other state controlled institutions, i.e., Korea Broadcasting Commission, Korea Broadcast Advertising Corporation, etc. When accused of his anti-constitutional coup of 1979 and 1980 at a National Assembly hearing which was held a decade later (December 31, 1989), Chun quibbled that neither had he an intention to take power nor was his military action a coup. He argued that he simply reacted to protect the nation from the immanent crisis (Sindonga P`yonjipsil 1990). But his false testimony only provoked a national anger and disgust given the disclosed evidences that confirm his planned seizure of political power. Recognizing the importance of media system in the success of coup, Chun's New Military Group(NMG) laid a very carefully arranged plan to take over the media in early 1980. According to a classified document, the 'K Project Plan', which was exposed to the public only in 1990, NMG was eager to bring leading journalist around to their side. The K project was designed and executed by the military intelligence command, which had already created a press team soon after the coup of 1979. At the core of the project, there was a list of 94 journalists who were working at leading media organizations, i.e., seven daily newspapers, five broadcasting companies, and two news agencies.[4] Their position in the organizations were mostly editor-in-chiefs, editorial writers, desk editors, publishers, and so on. In other words, they were the people who actually had most powerful positions in making national opinion. The K Project Plan contained a careful analysis of those journalists' political orientations and personal backgrounds. It also carried results of initial contacts with 18 journalists out of 94, indicating none of those 18 was against the NMG's rise to power. Although not all journalists were cooperators of the new military regime, some of those leading journalists subsequently found their way in the new regime as high-post politicians. If the rise of some cooperative journalists was a comedy of dark politics directed by the military regime, purging large number of journalists who had been critical to the authoritarian regime was a tragic event. The so-called "clean-up campaign" which began in May of 1980 was seemingly targeting corrupt politicians and bureaucrats who had accumulated surprising amount of wealth by misusing their powers. But the campaign not only eliminated those corrupt officials and politicians but also arbitrarily utilized to remove "corrupting" - that is, liberal or critical - intellectuals and journalists. According to one source, the total number of purged media workers was 933 including 705 journalists from major newspapers and broadcasting (Kim Hae-sik 1994: 155). This removal of journalists was intensified by another measure for press control under the banner of "media consolidation" (Ollon t`ongp`yehap). Three national and four local newspapers were forced to shut down. 172 periodicals that allegedly caused "social decay and juvenile delinquency" were summarily abolished -- among them some of the finest intellectual magazines of liberal inclination and prestigious journals for general audiences -- resulting in the dismissal of some 10,000 journalists and workers (Lee Chong-sik 1981: 135). The following Table 2 shows reduction of media workforce before and after 1980. It should, however, be noted that many of those who lost jobs by the consolidation of media were not in fact targeted by the regime but picked up by their own companies. In other words, companies "took the opportunity of ridding themselves of staffers considered incompetent or troublesome in other ways, so not all of the firings were politically motivated" (Far Eastern Economic Review 15 August 1980). According to the Far Eastern Economic Review's report on August 15, 1980, however, the criteria for the mass sacking of journalists include (i) those considered sympathetic to socialist ideas or lacking in anticommunist zeal; (ii) those with a record of criticism of government; (iii) those who campaigned for freedom of the press during the political turbulence of May, demanding the lifting of martial law censorship; (iv) those considered to have close personal relations with either opposition of former government politicians; and (v) those considered corrupt, either through taking pay-off or running side businesses. Table 2. Changes of workforce before and after 1980 Ollon t`ongp`yehap. (Number of media companies) Year National newspapers Local newspapers News agencies Broadcasting Total 1980 6,964 (13) 3,246 (14) 1,428 (7) 7,065 (30) 18,703 (64) 1981 6,291 (11) 2,558 (10) 640 (1) 7,297 (27) 16,786 (49) Changes -673 (-2) -668 (-4) -788 (-6) +232 (-3) -1,917 (-15) Source: Sinmun kwa pangsong (1980. 4; 1985. 5). The media consolidation measure of December 1 reshuffled broadcasting system to a unified public system as shown in Table 3. TBC television was merged in KBS to become KBS2 and MBC transferred 70 percent point of its share to KBS. All the radio stations except religious ones were also merged in KBS system. If the purpose of the press unification and rearrangement measure was strengthening political control over the media, the way it was administered was violence itself. Before the measure was publicized, on November 12, owners of media companies were all called to the headquarter and branch offices of the military intelligence command and asked to sign on a 'memorandum of relinquishment' which was already prepared by the Special Committee's press team. The memorandum begins with a statement as following: "With the beginning of a new time, in full cooperation with the state media policy, I approve the following settlement by which XXX(company) that I am representing is to be taken care of. I shall raise no objection to the settlement in any form including criminal prosecution, administrative litigation, and so on in the future."(Chong Chae-yong 1988) For those owners who were innocently forced to give up their private property, there were only two choices: to sign on the paper of theft or to suffer a dreadful hardship including torture and even death. Naturally none of the owners chose the latter. Consolidating diverse broadcasting outlets into a unified public system was a significant move for the coup group, which sought a readily manageable apparatus of political propaganda from the beginning of the coup. The concept of public broadcasting system borrowed from Western Europe's model (the BBC in particular) was merely a disguise employed to justify the coercive seizure of private property. The establishment of the public broadcasting system found its justification from the malice of privately owned commercial broadcasting. In other words, according to the protagonists of public system who made sudden appearances from here and there, commercial broadcasting was not good enough to breed a healthy national culture. It was of course a ludicrous attempt to hide the sun by a hand. Although there had been criticisms against television commercialism prior to 1980, they could not be a proper reason to bring the media to the state supervision. Furthermore, as shown in Table 3, even the religious radio stations such as CBS, FEBC, and Asea, were forced to give up news reporting, being allowed only to deliver religious content. Viewing this consolidation of television and radio under a public system with Table 3. Ollon t`ongp`yehap, the coercive consolidation of Korean broadcasting (1 December 1980) Before After DBS Donga pangsong KBS Radio Seoul Merged in KBS TBC TV AM Radio FM Radio KBS 2TV KBS 2Radio KBS 2FM Merged in KBS, becoming KBS2 Chonil pangsong KBS Kwangju 2Radio Merged in KBS Sohae pangsong KBS Kunsan Radio Merged in KBS CBS Kidokkyo pangsong FEBC Kuktong pangsong Asea pangsong CBS Radio FEBC Radio Asea Radio Confined in religious broadcasting MBC TV AM Radio FM Radio MBC TV MBC AM Radio MBC FM Radio 21 local affiliations were converted into subsidiaries of Seoul MBC. The latter bought 51% of shares from each local station. KBS TV AM Radio FM Radio KBS 1TV KBS 1Radio KBS 1FM KBS 3TV(UHF) KBS Educational Radio KBS Social Education Radio1 KBS Social Education Radio2 KBS Overseas Radio (10 language service) KBS took over DBS, TBC, Chonil pangsong, Sohae pangsong, and Han'guk FM pangsong. KBS also took 70% of MBC's share. KBS 3TV(UHF), an educational television channel, was created. Source: Korean Broadcasting Commission (1982). 82 yonch`a pogoso[82 Annual Report]. the frame of coup model, it seems that the military regime's intent may best be understood as concentration of ownership and control of information source, both are designed to promote, as Luttwak argued, a monopolization of information. Podo chich`im Another mechanism of the state's direct intervention in media may be most dramatically shown in so-called daily 'report guidelines (Podo chich`im)' which were issued to all newspapers and broadcasting networks from the initial stage of coup. During the short transition period from the 12.12 coup to the formal establishment of the Fifth Republic in late 1980, the NMG controlled press by issuing detailed guidelines of report under the martial law. Just before extending the martial law to the whole country on May 17, which was then limited to Seoul area, the military distributed a list of specific guidelines to follow to all media institutions. As is shown in the following (Kim Tong-son 1987), the guidelines were highly definite "Do-nots". 1 Any report justifying or supporting student actions should not be permitted. 1 Three family members of the arrested who marched in the front row of demonstrators at the Sungkyunkwan University and Kunkmin University can not appear in the news. 2 Do not report students' slogan such as 'Depossess the filthy property', 'Don't mistake, Kim Il Sung! No change in anti-communism'. 3 Do not report the fact that some student demonstrators served to put the traffic in order. 4 Do not report that the policy waged a hand-to-hand fight with students as they raged at some servicemen's injury. 5 Do not report anything on the Unification Party. 6 Do not report any comment of citizens, students, and demonstrators on military. As with other institutional changes, the report guidelines were not only enforced during the coup stage, but also sustained throughout the Fifth Republic. In other words, an extremely irrational measure installed to control media under a Martial Law became a fixed routine and remained after the Martial Law was actually lifted. Furthermore, the report guidelines given to media had become more specific as the state's media control institutionalized as a daily routine. It was the Public Information Coordination Bureau of the Ministry of Culture and Information that carried out this function on administrative level. Following examples of the report guidelines, which enforced during the late period of the Fifth Republic show that they are more specific and cover broader range compared with above quoted cases[5]: [Ex. 1] November 4, 1985. University students occupation of the American Chamber of Commerce office in the Choson hotel. At 1:08 P.M. police took all into custody. 1. Do not make this the top story on the social page. 2. Do not use a photo. 3. Do not write in the heading [that the demonstrating students] belong to the Seoul National University Committee for the Struggle for National Independence and Protection. [Ex. 2] November 7, 1985. At the Ministry of Finance, the Monopoly Office's change to a publicly owned corporation [i.e., a distancing from the state]. Make absolutely clear the point that [this action] "is not due to American pressure to open cigarette imports." [Ex. 3] December 23, 1985. It is desired that the UPI story " Possibility of Economic Downturn in Korea during 1986" not be carried. [Ex. 4] December 24, 1985. Do not relay the story about President Chun which appeared in the December 23 edition of the Asian Wall Street Journal, published in Hong Kong. [Ex. 5] January 9, 1986. Relating to U.S. sanctions on Libya: 1. It is best not to report just the American perspective but to report carefully the extent of our construction companies' advance [into that market] from the perspective of our national interests. 2. Do not report the movement of on-site Korean construction companies in Libya and related matters after the [imposition of] American sanctions. [Ex. 6] July 22, 1986. On the overall settlement of the Korean-American trade negotiations: 1. Use "Overall Settlement of Trade Problems" for the main heading. 2. The various responsive measures announced by government offices concerned with intellectual property rights, cigarettes, insurance, etc. are to be reported in detail as "complimentary measures." 3. The opposition party, nongovernment, and various interest groups' criticisms are to be reported briefly. 4. Even though foreign news agencies report "Bowing to American Pressure" etc., the story is to be reported under the headline of "Our side's Voluntary Response." 5. Even though some news commentaries went out as "Retreat from Original Position on Copyrights," change that to "Government's Countermeasures." [Ex. 7] November 18, 1986 (Kim Tong-su 1988): 1. University students 'Broke in the Democratic Justice Party building, broke up'. Report this news on city page with critical tone. 2. Police headquarter's release 'Student demonstration recently imitates the (Japanese) Red Army'. Play up this news with a title of 'Red Army technique' in particular. Until the dissident monthly magazine Mal printed excerpts of these news guidelines in its September issue of 1986, they were not known to the public. Shortly after the revelation, reporters who exposed them were prosecuted for revealing national secrets. Irrational and unreasonable things were already everyday routine under the repressive Chun's regime. The prosecution of these reporters is a representative of the kind of direct oppression by the state to control dissident journalists. Managing media with carrot and stick The state, however, not only gave media and journalists the harsh sticks such as sacking and arresting journalists, shutting down newspapers and stations, and so on, but also provided sweet carrots. Carrots were also given to both the media organizations and media workers including journalists. For the broadcasting organizations that unified under the KBS system, 1980s meant a great opportunity to enjoy a monopoly (formally an oligopoly of KBS and MBC) market situation, which was well protected by the state. Due to the continuous economic development[6], the nation's media and advertising markets were in rapid growth and the market entry was strictly concealed by the Basic Press Act. Accordingly, the time had arrived for the media organizations to accumulate with little competition. Before the introduction of public broadcasting system in 1980, Korea had one nominally public television (KBS) which did not carry any commercial, and two commercial television networks financed solely by advertising revenue (MBC and TBC). Although MBC could retain its name after 1980, its ownership was in fact transferred to KBS, and TBC became KBS 2TV. In actuality, then, all networks were unified into KBS system. After the consolidation, ironically, all three networks began to carry commercials and financed by advertising under the name of public system. The logic of this bizarre configuration was that the method of finance was not so important if the profit made from the management could be used for public project (So much would have been true if the fund was really used for the interest of the public.). By establishing the Korean Broadcast Advertising Corporation, the state monopolized broadcast advertising agency business and generated public fund from the operation of the KOBACO. The fund was supposed to be used in promoting public good. In reality, large chunk of this fund was utilized as carrots for journalists. Under the pretext of improving the quality and welfare of journalists, the money was used to finance journalists' travel, house purchasing, scholarships for both themselves and their off springs, etc. More importantly, as the state secured public broadcasting system in monopoly status, all channels enjoyed abundant cash flow without worrying about competition. As a result, the income level of media workers soared high enough to make them reposition themselves as the leading edge of middle class. New entrants of broadcasting company began to receive substantially higher salary (roughly about 20%-50% more) than those of big conglomerates. Despite the increasing public discredit on broadcasting, competition to enter the company has become tougher throughout the 1980s and finally reached to coin a new word "ollon kosi" hinting that becoming a reporter or producer is as hard as being selected as lawyers or government officials.[7] Another important mechanism to appease journalists and at the same time to control media organization can be found in the use of head position in each media firm. As the state brought two privately owned television channels under its control, the president appointed the position of head in each company. Chun filled those positions with his loyalists who especially worked hard for pro-Chun propaganda. Those positions were also recognized as temporary stops toward even higher political appointments such as ministers or presidential advisors. For just a few examples[8], Yi Wung-hee, former editor-in-chief of Dong-A Ilbo in 1980, sequentially took positions of spokesman of Blue House (1981), Head of MBC (1982-86), Minister of Information and Culture (1986), and Member of National Assembly in the ruling party's seat (1988). Yi Chin-hee, former editorial writer of Seoul Sinmun in 1979, wrote pro-Chun editorials on the eve of Chun's rise when most people were afraid of it, and soon began to changing positions to head of MBC (1980), Minister of Information and Culture (1982-85), and Head of Seoul Sinmun and Sports Seoul (1985-87). Chong Ku-ho, former deputy editor-in-chief of Seoul Sinmun in 1979, also held various positions such as head of Kyonghyang Sinmun (1980), spokesman of Blue House (1986), and head of KBS (1986-1988). Many other editors and reporters who witnessed the brutal as well as illegal coup of Chun also voluntarily jumped on the dictator's bloody wagon rather than fought against it. As heads of major media organizations, these people devoted to manage their media for the purpose of pro-Chun propaganda to promote themselves to the next positions. In fact they were neither journalists nor businessmen while they were still in media firms, but opportunistic politicians whose major concerns were not in journalism but in politics. The politics-media adhesion, or so-called chong-on yuch`ak, was already a deep-rooted problem of Korea's journalism since the Third Republic. Park's authoritarian regime picked pro-regime journalists for political positions as a way of controlling media criticism. Politically aspired journalists themselves used their power of reporting and writing to channel their ways toward politics. Eventually it became a question of chicken and egg. Reporters in charge of political beats have generally been perceived as potential pool of future politicians, and many of them in fact jumped into real politics using their connections formed while in journalism occupation. To the part of owners of media firms, political connection has been more important than their companies' business performance in the market. Anti-regime stance meant a deadly risk that can cost the existence of firms let alone rise and fall of them. During the mid-1970s, Park regime's oppression of Dong-A Ilbo exhibits a succinct example. As the giant daily tried to keep a critical stance to Park regime's policy, the state pressed advertisers to avoid buying Dong-A's space, which interestingly provoked ordinary readers to write lots of encouraging letters and send their pocket money to the paper. The happening resolved as a bitter victory of the paper, but the cost was high. Under a far harder oppression of Chun regime in early 1980s, no media dared to challenge the terror of coup state. On the contrary, many private-owned newspapers were busy justifying Chun's "patriotic" move, to say nothing of the state-controlled broadcasting. State monopoly and capital accumulation of television Coup regime's endeavor to monopolize information sources and outlets resulted a monopolized television market. Whatever the state had done with the mass media for the purpose of brainwashing the peoples' perception of the illegitimate political power (the propaganda mission) during the early 1980s, in economic sense, one of the most notable point we can spot is that both newspapers and broadcasting along with advertising had grown to be big corporations throughout the 1980s (Kim Shin Dong 1996; Kim Hae-sik 1994; Kang Myungkoo 1993; Kim Dong Gyu 1992). In 1988, both KBS and MBC recorded 3,371 hundred million Won ($421 million) and 1,572 hundred million Won ($196 million) of annual revenues respectively. Compared with those of 1981, these figures are roughly three times bigger. In 1994, MBC ranked 51st and KBS 56th among world's 100 largest television companies (Television Business International 1994: 23). The growth of the broadcasting industry in 1980s is spectacular. As already mentioned, this rapid financial growth of broadcasting was due to the institutionally secured monopoly system, however, it would not been possible without astonishingly growing advertising market. As Vogel pointed out, "[b]roadcasting revenue trends are dependent on advertising expenditure patterns, which are in turn related to total corporate profits" (1994: 18). During the 1980s, total advertising revenue of Korea swelled from 3,184 hundred million Won in 1981 to two trillion Won, marking 628 percent point of increase. The ratio of advertising spending to the GNP moved from 0.74 percent point in 1981 to 1.20 percent point in 1990. As shown in the following table and figure, it is supposed to be growing up to 1.50 percent point by the turn of the century. In 1980 the volume of the Korean advertising spending ranked 23rd in the world, in 1989 it was 13th. Table 4. Growth rates of broadcasting advertising revenue and GNP 1981-1990 (current price) Year Advertising revenue (%) Gross National Product (%) 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 2.82 (8.24) 40.08 (33.07) 36.31 29.78 4.43 11.03 16.50 24.00 18.56 17.75 23.89 14.62 18.28 13.55 11.42 16.02 17.03 19.06 11.75 17.71 Average 20.13 (19.97) 16.33 Source: KOBACO (1991). Pangsong kwanggo yongop paekso. p. 25; Original source: Economic Planning Board (for 1981-1989 GNP) and Bank of Korea (for 1990 GNP). Note: Figures in parentheses are the growth rates calculated including MBS's own sales of advertising in January 1981(6,300 million Won). Figure 1. Growth rates of broadcasting advertising revenue and GNP 1981-1990 (current price) (%) Despite the political upheavals in 1979 and 1980, the military regime succeeded in boosting the nation's economy[9], which had sunk into a deep depression in late 1970s. As shown in Table 4, the growth rates of GNP in early 1980s were quite remarkable, and so were the growth rates of advertising revenue of broadcasting especially in 1982, 1983, and 1984. Following the GNP soar in 1981, ad revenue skyrocketed in the next year showing 40.08% of growth rate. Except three years in mid-eighties, the growth rates of ad revenue were all higher than those of GNP since 1982. As the advertising market expands, interestingly, KBS's revenue source shows a parallel move toward advertising. As in Table 5, KBS raised about 60% of its revenue from license fees while ad revenue accounted for less than 40% in 1981. After five years, the ratio reversed, and the share of license fee was only 23.4% in 1988. Even MBC, which had never been operated on license fee, increased its share of advertising revenue from 89.9% in 1981 to 94.8% in 1988 as displayed in Table 6 and Figure 3. What then is the point that we can notice from the growth of advertising and broadcasting industry in early 1980s? Wouldn't it be possible even if the broadcasting system remained as a mixture of commercial and public dual system as they had been in pre-1980? With the growth of overall national economy, it is not difficult to assume that both advertising and broadcasting sector would have been expanded, even if there had not been the media consolidation and the monopolized public system. The increasing demand for television is also reflected on the growth of relay cable television[10] as shown in Table 7. Both the number of cable television operator and receiver rapidly increased during the early 1980s, and the portion of illegal operators and receivers were also sharply increasing. This could be interpreted as a market response to the shortage of monopolized television systems in providing diverse need for channels. The public monopoly system of television recorded a rapid financial growth, but it does not mean that the overall broadcasting industry was well developed with diversifying channels, promoting public culture while not prohibiting advertising market, etc. On the contrary, politically protected and legally concealed broadcasting market hindered a normal growth of electronic media as evidenced in the increasing share of illegal cable operators and subscribers. The existence of illegal operators was negligible at the initial stage, but soon they attracted public attention as their penetration became all too well visible. Furthermore, since most of these illegal operators were small businesses with little money, the quality of their service could not be satisfactory. Low-quality movies filled chunk of their programming, yet more people wanted to hook up their sets to cables. Consequently, the problem of cable television became a political agenda from mid-1980s. However, it is important to remind that the question is not whether the broadcasting system financially expanded but how the financial and commercial expansion was more vigorously executed under the banner of public system. In 1970s, there were only two television channels which carried commercials; in 1980s, ironically enough, the public system which stood on the abolition of commercial television companies (MBC and TBC) made additional outlet of advertising to the two previously commercial channels. To be sure, this was a glad news to big corporations who were anxiously looking for easier access to advertising outlet. But the distortion of television market caused by state monopoly public system could not meet with expanding market demand in both advertising and channel choice. In sum, we can trace the coup regime's policy of media system on different dimensions. Firstly, the state consolidated broadcasting system to monopolize information sources and outlets for the purpose of political propaganda; Secondly, in doing so, the media consolidation resulted in a monopoly system of broadcasting which made the television companies possible to grow as big corporations; Thirdly, the state monopoly public system of television caused a market distortion that hindered a normal development of electronic media; Finally, and most importantly in light of my argument, this process was basically maintained through continuing application of coercive media control based on the repressive politics of coup. As the Chun's repressive coup regime collapsed in 1986, the suppressed demand for diversified television outlets surfaced, and this became a political burden to the following regime. Table 5. Composition of KBS's total revenue 1981-1988 (Hundred million Won, %) 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 License fee 632 (58.9) 909 (57.5) 1,081 (51.0) 1,256 (46.2) 1,196 (44.9) 1,013 (39.3) 918 (34.2) 790 (23.4) Advertising 396 (36.9) 639 (40.5) 1,001 (47.3) 1,367 (50.3) 1,365 (51.3) 1,487 (57.5) 1,696 (63.1) 2,153 (63.9) Etc 45 (4.2) 32 (2.0) 36 (1.7) 65 (3.5) 102 (3.8) 76 (3.0) 73 (2.7) 428 (12.7) Total 1,073 (100) 1,580 (100) 2,118 (100) 2,718 (100) 2,663 (100) 2,576 (100) 2,687 (100) 3,371 (100) Source: Kim, Hae-sik (1994). Han'guk ollon ui sahoehak. Seoul: Nanam. p.207; Original source: KBS nyonji (1981-1988). Figure 2. Increase of advertising share in KBS's total revenue Table 6. Composition of MBC's total revenue 1981-1988 (Hundred million Won, %) 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 Advertising 535 (89.9) 578 (93.8) 694 (92.4) 828 (93.6) 906 (93.2) 1,043 (95.3) 1,262 (95.3) 1,490 (94.8) Subsidiary business 34 (5.7) 20 (3.2) 35 (4.7) 34 (3.8) 25 (2.6) 16 (1.5) 17 (1.3) 28 (1.8) Etc. 26 (4.4) 18 (2.9) 22 (2.9) 23 (2.6) 41 (4.2) 36 (3.3) 45 (3.4) 54 (3.4) Total 595 (100) 616 (100) 751 (100) 885 (100) 972 (100) 1,095 (100) 1,324 (100) 1,572 (100) Source: Kim, Hae-sik (1994). Han'guk ollon ui sahoehak. Seoul: Nanam. p.207; Original source: Chong, Yon-u (1989). "Kwanggoju e uihan ollon t`ongje", Chonollisum, Fall and Winter. p. 207. Figure 3. Increase of advertising share in MBC's total revenue Table 7. Increase of cable television providers and receivers 1982-1987 (%) Year Cable TV provider (Total) Cable TV provider (Licensed) Cable TV receiver (Total) Cable TV receiver (Licensed) 1982 497 374 (75.25) 339,169 304,453 (89.76) 1983 476 347 (72.90) 380,289 339,762 (89.34) 1984 645 397 (61.55) 533,638 384,289 (72.01) 1985 752 387 (51.46) 611,317 440,133 (72.00) 1986 859 399 (46.45) 756,007 532,018 (70.37) 1987 945 399 (42.22) 1,269,937 773,777 (60.93) Source: KISDI (1988.12.) Yuson TV ui hyoyulchok yuksong ul wihan unyong chedo e kwanhan yon'gu. Seoul: KISDI. p. 27. Conclusion: growth of television and a stillborn public system From the inception of public television system in 1980 up to the 1987, the Korean state's relationship with television may well be described by "state monopoly commercial television", an authoritarian public system. State intervention on the television market was extremely concentrated while it maintained a strong control on the media. I have characterized the Korean public broadcasting system in early 1980s as a coup model case. Unlike the propaganda model that puts emphases on private ownership of large capital and fails to emboss the violent characteristics of radical political change, and thereby looks over the role of state in molding media systems, the coup model I proposed here succinctly shows that state power is decisive, even in a capitalist society, in a coup-like situation. Two most important as well as interesting points I made here include: the mechanism of media control in the coup model is fundamentally depends on the omnipotent and omnipresent state power which arbitrarily applies its use of violence in almost every steps; the politically motivated state intervention eventually resulted an economically monopolized system of broadcasting by which both KBS and MBC could emerge as big corporations. In that limited sense, I argue that the Fifth Republic's broadcasting policy was market formative. While overall direction of industrial policy of the Fifth Republic was aimed at more deregulation and decentralization, the coup state could not afford to let the media industry including broadcasting play on rules of market. In other words, control of media through decentralized market was not an option for the coup state that needed immediate and direct seizure of media or communication channels. By establishing public system, the state effectively took privately owned broadcasting stations, and was able to use the system as if it was a state agency. Figure 4 shows processes and outcomes of media consolidation and control of the coup state. It is important to note that in every step of the process, decisions were backed by visible or invisible threat of violence. As summed up in the figure, the coup state's approach to media may be broken into two types, formal institutional control and informal conventional control. On formal level, legal and institutional devices were used to consolidate media system, which rendered a monopolized broadcasting dinosaur. On informal conventional level, state intervened on everyday practice of media production by issuing report guidelines, checking journalists on their political alignment, alluring journalists into the corrupted politics, and so on. The formation of public broadcasting system as characterized in the coup model not only served immediate need for political propaganda in early 1980s, but more importantly also grounded (or strengthened, perhaps) an institutional legacy of state-dependent media. Mass media of Korea had never been independent from political power under the Park regime that itself rose to power through a military coup in 1961. The media has hardly been a checker of political power but has aligned itself with the interest of political power for decades. During the short periods in 1960 and 1980, the Korean media showed that it was willing to speak up on behalf of the people, but soon resumed to serve political power as the coup state laid hard hands on it. Removing actual owners of broadcasting stations, Chun filled the head-position of broadcasting companies with his loyalists. Filling top positions of media organizations with Chun's loyalists not only meant an immediate control of it, but also left the media with a deep structure of subordination to political power, as it happened in the previous decades. Pro-regime minded and politically opportunistic reporters and editors lined up for important positions in every media firm and develop a connection which effectively exclude reform-minded colleagues. Even after the fall of coup regime, these people last and seek another chance to collaborate with successive power. Consequently, the coup formation of media system fundamentally contributed to destroy media's watchdog function and left it as an institutional legacy. The public broadcasting system of Korea might have been public in terms only that the system was no longer owned by private capital or state in formal sense. Being motivated by the need of coup state, however, the system was a stillborn public system from the beginning. It only contributed to the state propaganda and the making of broadcasting behemoth. References Chong Chae-yong (1988) 80 nyon ollon t`ongp`yehap kwa 'Chonnam maeil', Kukje sinmun'. Sindonga, December: 390-405. Chong Chong-gil (1992) Yokdae Taet`ongnyong ui kyongje chongch`aek 2 Chun Doo Hwan. Sindonga 10: 228-245. Chong Yon-u (1989) Kwanggoju e uihan ollon t`ongje. Chonollisum, Fall and Winter. Cumings, Bruce (1989) The abortive avertura: South Korea in the light of Latin American experience. New Left Review 173: 5-32. Far Eastern Economic Review (15 August 1980) After the axe, the scissors. Ferguson, Gregor (1987) Coup d'Etat: A Practical Manual. Dorset: Arms and Armour Press. Gerth, H. H. and C. Wright Mills (1946): From Max Weber: Essays in Sociology. New York: Oxford University Press. Haggard, Stephan and Susan Collins (1994) The political economy of adjustment in the 1980s. In S. Haggard et al. (Eds.) Macroeconomic Policy and Adjustment in Korea 1970-1990. Harvard Institute for International Development. Herman, Edward S. and Noam Chomsky (1988) Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media. New York: Pantheon Books. Janelli, Roger (1993) Making Capitalism. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. Kang Myungkoo (1993) From watchdog to power: Journalists' career movement toward political power. Paper presented to the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication annual convention in Kansas City, Missouri, August 11- 14. Keane, John (1991) The Media and Democracy. Cambridge: Polity Press. Kim Dong Gyu [Kim Tong-gyu] (1992) 1980 nyondae han'guk pangsong sanop ui kyongjejok t'uksong e kwanhan yon'gu [Economic characteristics of the Korean broadcasting industry in the 1980s]. Ollon Munhwa Yon'gu [Sogang Journal of Media and Culture] 10: 135-160. Kim Hae-sik (1994) Han'guk ollon ui sahoehak. Seoul: Nanam. Kim Kyu et al. (1994) Broadcasting in Korea. Seoul: Nanam. Kim Shin Dong (1993) Foreign News coverage and its political mediation: A case study on the U.S. media coverage of the Kwangju Uprising in 1980. Paper presented to the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication annual conference in Kansas City, Missouri, August 11-14. Kim Shin Dong (1996) Expansion of Korean television industry and transnational capitalism. In M. Richards and D. French (eds.) Contemporary Television: Eastern Perspectives. London: Sage. Kim Shin Dong (1997) Globalization, communication and the nation-state: a conceptual exploration. Paper presented to the Speech Communication Association annual conference, Chicago, IL, November. Kim Tong-son (1987) Che 5 konghwaguk ui ollon t`ongje silt`ae. Sindonga, November: 518-526. Kim Tong-su (1988) Kwon-on Yuch`ak ui hyonjang, 'hongjosil'. Wolgan Kyonghyang, November: 132- 147. KISDI (1988.12.) Yuson TV ui hyoyulchok yuksong ul wihan unyong chedo e kwanhan yon'gu. Seoul: KISDI. KOBACO (1991) Pangsong kwanggo yongop paekso. Seoul: KOBACO. Luttwak, Edward (1968) Coup d'Etat: A Practical Handbook. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Minju ollon undong hyobuihoe (Ed.)(1988) Podo chich`im. Seoul: Ture. O'Kane, Rosemary (1987) The Likelihood of Coups. Aldershot: Avebury. Park Kwon-sang (1988) Ollon t`ongp`yehap kwa onkipop chejong. Hyondae han'guk ul duihundun 60- dae sakon: haebang eso che 5-gonghwaguk kkaji (Supplement of Sindonga January issue): 282- 287. Sindonga P`yonjipsil (1990) K-gongjak: ollonin 94 myong p`osop kyehoik. Sindonga February: 444-459. Television Business International (1994) Vogel, Harold (1994) Entertainment Industry Economics, 3rd Ed. Cambridge University Press. [1] It seems now that global competition or national competitiveness has been replacing it as an ideological slogan since the fall of the socialist Eastern bloc. [2] Quoted from Max Weber, Politics as a Vocation. In Gerth and Mills (Eds.) (1946: 78). [3] New Military Group's coup of December 12, 1979 was not really completed until Chun's group extended Martial Law to whole nation on May 17, 1980, and brutally quelled the Kwangju Uprising. Therefore, in my view, the coup was still in process during the early months of 1980. [4] Newspapers were Dong-A Ilbo, Chosun Ilbo, Han'guk Ilbo, Joongang Ilbo, Kyunghyang Sinmun, Seoul Sinmun, and Sina Ilbo. Broadcasting companies include KBS, MBC, TBC, CBS, and DBS. Tongyang T`ongsin and Haptong T`ongsin were two news agencies (Sindonga p`yonjipsil 1990). [5] These examples are quoted from Janelli (1993: 65-66) and translation from the original Korean to English is also his. [6] Table. Major economic indicators of South Korea, 1979-1986 (percentages) Source: Haggard et al. (1994: 76) [7] In Korea, to enter media firms, one should take entrance exams given by each company. "Kosi" is an examination system through which the state selects lawyers and high civil servants, which usually means a very difficult yet rewarding path to success. [8] I took these examples from Sindonga Pyonjipsil (1990). [9] Chun's economic policy was essentially the same in terms that it found legitimacy of his coup regime from the 'development dictatorship', and pursued high rate of growth through continuing oppression of labor. It, however, endeavored a structural adjustment of economy that attempted to reduce the privileged position of big conglomerates and promote competition. For an analysis of the Fifth Republic's adjustment policy, see Haggard and Collins (1994); For Chun's administrative style in managing economic policy, see Chong Chong-gil (1992). [10] Relay cable television indicates cable operators that mostly transmit reruns of network programs and cheap movies for urban business subscribers (hotels, restaurants, etc.) and/or rural residents who could not have clear reception of network television. They are differentiated from the general cable television operators that began in 1993 with the solely devoted cable program providers.
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