Korean Law and CSR Implementation


Stakeholders

Regulatory focus
 
Results

Actions/process

Structure

Shareholders

Limited liabilitya

Profit-making purposeb and dividendsc

Capital marketsd

Duty of caree

Duty of loyaltyf

Disclosure lawg

Antifraud lawh

Insider trading lawi

Shareholder voting for directorsj

Right to sue derivativelyk

Right to vote on major corporate changesl

Employees

Minimum wagem

Workers’ retirement benefits actn

Workers’ compensationo

Antidiscrimination lawp

Plant closing notificationq

Requirements labor lawr
 
Community/environment

“Command and control” environmental statutes; clean airs/water acts,t etc.

Tort lawu

Environmental impact statementsv

Development projectw
 
Customers

Contract lawx

Consumer safety law regulatory protectionsy (food and drug, consumer protection, product liability, etc.)

Antifraud lawz

Tort lawaa

Antitrust lawab
 
Creditors

Contract lawac

Commercial lawad

Good faith in contractae

Antifraud lawaf

Bankruptcy lawag
 

aSangbeob [Commercial Act], Act. No. 1000, Jan. 20, 1962, art. 331 (S. Kor.).

b Id. art. 169.

c Id. art. 462−64.

dDaehanminkuk Hunbeop [Hunbeop] [Constitution] art. 119 (1) (S. Kor.); Jabonsijangoaguemyungtujaeobegwananbeomlyul [Financial Investment Services and Capital Markets Act], Act No 8635, Aug. 3, 2007 (S. Kor.).

eThe Korean Commercial Act declares “duty of care” of the directors by applying delegation provisions of the Civil Act. Sangbeob [Commercial Act], Act No. 1000, Jan. 20, 1962, amended by Act No. 9362, Jan. 30, 2009, art. 382 clause 2 (S. Kor.). Article 681 of the Civil Act mandates “duty of care” of a delegate to “manage the affairs entrusted to him with the care of a good manager in accordance with the tenor of the [delegation].” Minbeob [Civil Act], Act No. 471, Feb. 22, 1958, art. 681 (S. Kor.). The Commercial Act applies this “duty of care” of the Civil Act to corporate directors. Sangbeob [Commercial Act], Act No. 1000, Jan. 20, 1962, amended by Act No. 9362, Jan. 30, 2009, art. 382 clause 2 (S. Kor.). Article 382 Clause 2 of the Act provides that “the provisions for delegation of the Civil Act shall apply … to the relationship between the company and the directors.” Sangbeob [Commercial Act], Act No. 1000, Jan. 20, 1962, amended by Act No. 9362, Jan. 30, 2009, art. 382 clause 2 (S. Kor.).

f“(Duty of Loyalty) Directors shall perform their duties in good faith for the interest of the company in accordance with Acts, subordinate statutes, and the articles of incorporation.” Sangbeob [Commercial Act], Act. No. 1000, Jan. 20, 1962, newly inserted by Act No. 5591, Dec. 28, 1998, art. 382−3 (S. Kor.).

gDirectors shall submit financial statements, etc. Sangbeob [Commercial Act], Act. No. 1000, Jan. 20, 1962, amended by Act No. 10600, Apr. 14, 2011, art. 449 (1); amended by Act No. 3724, Apr. 10, 1984, art. 449 (2) (S. Kor.).

hJabonsijangoaguemyungtujaeobegwananbeomlyul [Financial Investment Services and Capital Markets Act], Act No 8635, Aug. 3, 2007, art. 178 (S. Kor.).

i Id. art. 174 (1).

j“Directors shall be appointed at a general shareholders’ meeting.” Sangbeob [Commercial Act], Act. No. 1000, Jan. 20, 1962, amended by Act No. 9362, Jan. 30, 2009, art. 382 (1) (S. Kor.).

kSangbeob [Commercial Act], Act. No. 1000, Jan. 20, 1962, amended by Act No. 5591, Dec. 28, 1998, art. 403 (S. Kor.).

l See, e.g., id. at 438, 522, 604, 518, 374, etc.

mDaehanminkuk Hunbeop [Hunbeop] [Constitution] art. 32 (1) (S. Kor.); Choejeoyimgeumbeob [Minimum Wage Act], Act No. 3927, Dec. 31, 1986 (S. Kor.).

nGeulojatoejigeubyeobojangbeob [Guarantee of Workers’ Retirement Benefits Act], Act No. 7379, Jan. 27, 2005 (S. Kor.).

oMinbeob [Civil Act], Act No. 471, Feb. 22, 1958, art. 751, 756 (S. Kor.); Geulogijunbeob [Labor Standards Act], Act No. 10339, Jul. 5, 2010, art. 78–92 (S. Kor.); Saneobjaehaeboheom [Industrial Accident Compensation Insurance Act], Act No. 8694, Dec. 14, 2007 (S. Kor.).

p See, e.g., Daehanminkuk Hunbeop [Hunbeop] [Constitution] art. 11 (1) (S. Kor.); Geulogijunbeob [Labor Standards Act], Act No. 10339, Jul. 5, 2010, art. 5, 31 (2) (S. Kor.); Nodongjohabmitnodongjwhangyewoweongbeob [Trade Union And Labor Relations Adjustment Act], Act No. 5310, Mar. 13, 1997, art. 9 (S. Kor.); Goyongjeongchaekgibobbeob [Framework Act of Employment Policy], Act No 9792, Oct. 9, 2009, art. 19 (S. Kor.).

q Id. art. 46 (2).

rLabor Standards Act, Act. No. 8372, Apr. 11, 2007 (S. Kor.).

sClean Air Conservation Act, Act. No. 8404, Apr. 27, 2007 (S. Kor.).

tWater Quality and Ecosystem Conservation Act, Act. No. 7459, Mar. 31, 2005 (S. Kor.).

uMinbeob [Civil Act], Act No. 471, Feb. 22, 1958, art. 750, 751 (S. Kor.).

vHwankyeongyeonghyangpyeongabeob [Environmental Impact Assessment Act], Act No. 9037, Mar. 28, 2008 (S. Kor.).

w Id.

xThe Civil Act generally governs legal effects and liabilities of transactions between corporations and consumers. Minbeob [Civil Act], Act No. 471, Feb. 22, 1958 (S. Kor.).

yFramework Act on Consumers, Act. No. 7988, Sep. 27, 2006 (S. Kor.); Sikpumwesaengbeob [Food Sanitation Act], Act No. 9432, Feb. 6, 2009 (S. Kor.); Yaksabeob [Pharmaceutical Affairs Act], Act No. 8365, Apr. 11, 2007 (S. Kor.); Whajangpumbeob [Cosmetics Act], Act No. 6025, Sep. 7, 1999 (S. Kor.); Jejomulchaegimbeob [Product Liability Act], Act No. 6109, Jan. 12, 2000 (S. Kor.).

zJabonsijangoaguemyungtujaeobegwananbeomlyul [Financial Investment Services and Capital Markets Act], Act No 8635, Aug. 3, 2007, art. 178 (S. Kor.).

aaMinbeob [Civil Act], Act No. 471, Feb. 22, 1958, art. 750, 751 (S. Kor.).

abBujeongkyeongjaengbangjimityeongeubimilbohoegwanhanbeomlul [Unfair Competition Prevention and Trade Secret Protection Act], Act No. 3897, Dec. 31, 1986 (S. Kor.); Monopoly Regulation and Fair Trade Act, Act. No. 4198, Jan. 13, 1990 (S. Kor.); Regulation of Standardized Contract Act, Act. No. 3922, Dec. 31, 1986 (S. Kor.); Price Stabilization Act, Act. No. 2798, Dec. 31, 1975 (S. Kor.).

acMinbeob [Civil Act], Act No. 471, Feb. 22, 1958 (S. Kor.).

adSangbeob [Commercial Act], Act. No. 1000, Jan. 20, 1962 (S. Kor.).

aeMinbeob [Civil Act], Act No. 471, Feb. 22, 1958, art. 2 (S. Kor.).

afJabonsijangoaguemyungtujaeobegwananbeomlyul [Financial Investment Services and Capital Markets Act], Act No 8635, Aug. 3, 2007, art. 178 (S. Kor.).

agChaemujawhoesaengmitpasanegwanhanbeomlul [Debtor Rehabilitation and Bankruptcy Act], Act No. 7428, Mar. 31, 2005 (S. Kor.).




6.2.1.1 Stakeholder-Centric Regulations for Improving CSR


Korea has enacted specific and special individual laws aimed at curbing corporate abuse that are similar to US laws . Koreans, like their American counterparts, are increasingly worried about societal harm arising from corporate activities.85 Consequently, the Korean regulatory authorities have begun mandating regulations concerning the protection of constituencies against certain societal harms induced by corporate activities. These laws have surely legitimized the principle of CSR in every relevant field of Korean society, insofar as CSR legislation embraces a legal means for regulating the consequences of corporate activities.

This book, however, does not aim to demonstrate whether all of these regulations functionally implement CSR in each respective area. Instead, it seeks to identify the constraints on establishing normative CSR legislation and to formulate a systematic methodology toward realizing CSR implementation by illustrating individual regulations governing corporate activities. This approach necessarily brings into focus the overall picture of a Korean legislative framework promoting CSR. For this purpose, this section examines instances of CSR implementation according to the Greenfield classification in order to demonstrate the mechanism of how these individual regulations employ and fulfill the function of CSR with a stakeholder-centric perspective .

Greenfield classifies the regulatory efforts to constrain and harness corporate power according to the stakeholders who can be affected by corporate activities. As shown in Chap. 2, business basically performs economic activities; however, it also involves the effects that its activities impose on the surrounding environment and society.86 This dimensional approach to CSR stems from the notion of the sphere of influence in CSR, as enshrined in the international human rights discourse of the United Nations Global Compact.87 Greenfield’s stakeholder-centric classification is in line with the notion of the sphere of influence in CSR as well. Thus, the section below will employ both approaches simultaneously to provide a more comprehensive overview of the regulations aimed at improving CSR in Korea.



a.

Economic Dimension

 

As it relates to shareholders, CSR consists of making profit and returning it to the shareholder under the capital market system.88 This responsibility can be also referred to as the economic dimension of CSR, considering the effects of business “on the economic conditions of its stakeholders and on economic systems at local, national, and global levels.”89

Various laws govern this economic system linking the corporation and stakeholders.90 Shareholders, as a collective internal organ of the corporation, enjoy the right to vote for directors,91 the right to sue derivatively,92 the right to vote on major corporate changes,93 etc. CSR for shareholders might also include the responsibility to reconcile interests among themselves and to protect minority as well as controlling shareholders.94 Shareholders are also protected from managerial abuses through the duty of care95 and the duty of loyalty96 of managers; as well as by disclosure law,97 antifraud law,98 and the insider trading Law,99 etc. More general economic protection against corporate activities is available through the limited liability of shareholders,100 the profit-making purpose of the corporation,101 shareholders’ right to dividends,102 and the capital market system in general.103

These aspects are particularly significant for minority shareholders, as controlling shareholders of Korean chaebols wield decisive power over the corporation.104 As the Everland case has shown, noncontrolling minority shareholders cannot effectively protect themselves due to the circular ownership structure of the chaebol.105 Indeed, one of the most pressing challenges posed in the CSR debate in Korea is the need to enact legislation that robustly expands the protection of public minority shareholders from the discretionary corporate abuses of chaebol families.

As it relates to creditors, CSR might be interpreted as consisting of the protection of creditors’ economic rights under the capital market system.106 Thus, it might include the responsibility to reconcile interests between creditors and corporations as well as between shareholders.107 This responsibility can also be part of the economic dimension of CSR, considering the effects of business “on the economic conditions … on economic systems.”108 The corporate obligation of good faith in contract,109 antifraud law,110 and bankruptcy law111 protects creditors by requiring or encouraging certain actions or processes of corporate activities. Contract law112 under the Korean Civil Act and corporate law113 under the Korean Commercial Act both protect creditors’ interests by preventing corporate abuses of power.114



b.

Social Dimension

 

As for employees, the Korean legislative system protects them in various ways. This approach is based on the same understanding of the social dimension derived from the notion of the sphere of influence in CSR, considering the effects from business “on the social systems within which it operates … [and the fact that] … social performance indicators identify … performance aspects surrounding labor practices, human rights, society, and product responsibility.”115

The Korean Constitution establishes the rights of the worker by stating, “The state shall endeavor to promote the employment of workers and to guarantee optimum wages through social and economic means and shall enforce a minimum wage system.”116 Under this constitutional protection, Korean society protects workers’ wage rights through an individual labor law, the Minimum Wage Act.117

The Korean Constitution also requires that “the state shall prescribe by Act the extent and conditions of the duty to work in conformity with democratic principles,”118 and that “standards of working conditions shall be determined by Act in such a way as to guarantee human dignity.”119 The Constitution also specifically protects the rights of working women and children.120 In particular, under this constitutional protection, Korean society safeguards workers’ rights against corporate misconduct or unfair business decisions through individual labor laws such as the Workers’ Retirement Benefits Act,121 workers’ compensation,122 antidiscrimination laws,123 plant closing notification,124 and the requirements of labor law.125 Even though the Constitution and labor-related legislation are not considered manifestations of direct CSR implementation, such regulations can be effective mechanisms for protecting corporate employees.

As for customers, many Korean laws regulate the effect of the products of corporate business activities on public life. This approach is also based on the same understanding of the social dimension derived from the notion of the sphere of influence in CSR, considering the effects that business may exert on social systems.126

In this regard, existing legislation encourages the corporation to serve on behalf of the consumer under the Framework Act on Consumers and other laws.127 Antifraud law,128 tort law,129 and antitrust law,130 meanwhile, require or encourage corporations to perform their business activities in line with corresponding social responsibilities. Furthermore, regulatory protection also plays a crucial role, as in the case of contract law131 and consumer safety provisions132 (food and drug, consumer protection, product liability, etc.),guarding consumers against any harmful result of corporate activities. These regulations provide detailed and specific obligations for corporations as they pertain to providing qualified goods and services and protecting consumers’ rights in consideration of a myriad of aspects of CSR.



c.

Environmental Dimension

 

As for the community and environment, Korean legislation focuses on protecting these natural systems from environmental pollution, a major undesirable result of corporate business activities.133 This approach can be understood in the same context of the environmental dimension of CSR concerning business’s impacts “on living and nonliving natural systems, including ecosystems, land, air, and water.”134

The Korean Constitution establishes the environmental rights of citizens by stating, “The State and all citizens shall endeavor to protect the environment.”135 Under Constitutional guarantees, tort law,136 environmental impact statements,137 and industrial development regulations138 require or encourage certain actions or processes for promoting CSR for the health of the environment.

Also like the US approach, Korean legislation regulates environmental issues via the command-and-control method of regulating potential harm from corporate activities through various environmental statutes such as the Clean Air Conservation Act,139 the Noise and Vibration Control Act,140 and the Water Quality and Ecosystem Conservation Act.141 Recently, this effort to protect the environment has grown to include an active response to global warming issues related to the business industry.142 The environmental dimension of corporate responsibility is one of the most important issues in the CSR debate. Individual environmental laws crafted to specific instances would be the best solution for encouraging corporations to engage in ecologically responsible behavior.


6.2.1.2 Corporate-Centric Comprehension of CSR


This book ultimately seeks to advance a systematic legal framework for implementing normative CSR. For this purpose, the following section examines instances of CSR implementation according to the Greenfield classification to demonstrate the mechanism of how individual regulations employ and fulfill the function of CSR with a corporate-centric perspective .

Concerning the protection of constituencies against certain negative “results” of corporate activities, namely the production of societal harm, Korean laws have various mandatory regulations regarding such matters. Table 6.1 lists these individual regulations requiring or encouraging “certain results” for CSR in Korea. These various laws were conceived to regulate the results of corporate activities that have triggered societal harm in Korea, according to the demand for protection of each stakeholder category. Individual laws aimed at averting the deleterious effects of corporate business have certainly implemented CSR in multiple areas of Korean society and industry, insofar as CSR legislation embraces a legal means for preventing the social harm that could arise from corporate activities. However, as in the US regulatory system, most of these laws are not a part of the traditional corporate legal context.143

As for the protection of constituencies against certain “processes or actions” of corporations, numerous regulations establish specifications for improving CSR, as shown in Table 6.1. These laws govern corporate activities focusing on business decisions, disclosure, and accountability in a traditional corporate legal context. For instance, disclosure regulations144 and antifraud law145 govern specific “processes or actions” that imply a CSR obligation for corporations .

However, regarding “internal structure,” as in its American corollary, Korean law does not provide any channel that would obligate companies to practice CSR by accepting stakeholders as collective internal organs. Indeed, non-shareholder stakeholders are not eligible to protect their interests as subjects of internal structure—neither under current Korean or US corporate law.

Following the brief review in Sect. 6.2.1 of Korean regulations governing corporate activities, this work now proposes to organize sporadic instances of CSR-implementing legislation into a systematic form. As Table 6.1 has shown, Korean legislation contains regulations governing corporate activities for CSR that are nearly identical to Greenfield’s US examples.146 Although the perception that CSR cannot be a legal norm apparently dominates Korean society,147 these regulations governing corporate power already fulfill CSR implementation . Additionally, these numerous laws governing all areas possibly affected by business activities have already constructed a practical route leading to Korean CSR implementation. This book further argues that such individual regulatory statutes requiring or encouraging certain “results,” “actions/process,” and “structures” of corporate activities for protecting various stakeholders vis-à-vis economic, social, and environmental dimensions are the most effective mechanism for implementing CSR in Korea. Thus, Korean jurisprudence should explicitly confirm that normative CSR has already been implemented by these regulatory statutes, and systemically and effectively comprehend and develop these regulations, in line with a CSR-centric perspective .



6.2.2 Examples of Regulatory Protection for Constituencies in Corporate Law


Section 6.2.1 reviewed specific regulatory restrictions on corporate activities that involve CSR concerns, using a macroscopic approach to the Korean legal system. While said legal system has evolved to improve normative CSR through various regulations in different areas, what has corporate law done to achieve the regulatory implementation of CSR? Furthermore, within this regulatory system, what role does corporate law play in improving CSR? This section tries to answer these questions by illustrating possible regulatory instruments aimed at improving CSR in the corporate law context . For this purpose, this section briefly illustrates some examples of possible CSR regulations.


6.2.2.1 Fiduciary Duty of Managers for Stakeholders


There is no Korean statutory or judiciary declaration stating that the fiduciary duty of managers can extend to stakeholders beyond the corporation itself . Despite this absence of an explicit provision, one may argue that portions of the Korean Commercial Act provide cause of action for stakeholders to hold managers to an obligation of CSR.148 Professor Taek-Sik Ahn contends that the duty of loyalty as expressed in Article 382-3 of the Korean Commercial Act includes an implied notion of CSR, even though there is no explicit mention of the principle.149 Article 382-3 of the Act establishes the duty of loyalty in that “directors shall perform their duties in good faith for the interest of the company in accordance with Acts, subordinate statutes, and the articles of incorporation.”150 Assuming the validity of this fiduciary duty of managers for stakeholders under Article 382-3, Ahn argues that managers are liable to stakeholders for a failure of CSR, under the provision for directors’ liability toward third parties in Article 401 of the Act.151 According to the said Article, “if a director has neglected to perform his/her duties intentionally or by gross negligence, he/she shall be jointly and severally liable for damage against a third party.”152 Ahn broadly interprets the provision as declaring that directors have a fiduciary obligation to promote CSR in regard to stakeholders and should thus be liable for damages when their business activities affect the latter party.153 Professor Seong-Keun Choi agrees with Ahn and enhances the argument by emphasizing that numerous US states have already enacted this liability of managers vis-à-vis stakeholders in corporate law.154

However, Ahn appears to have overstretched the meaning of the duty of loyalty provision. Song criticizes Ahn’s interpretation, noting that the duty of loyalty established under the Korean Commercial Act is too narrowly defined to include CSR.155 As Song points out, Article 382-3 of the Act does not provide any specific or implied stipulation regarding CSR .156 Indeed, as demonstrated previously, American CSR proponents have similarly attempted to stretch the scope of the fiduciary duty to stakeholders by arguing that US corporate law declares managers to be fiduciaries for the corporation and shareholders.157 However, Korean corporate law clearly establishes that managers are fiduciaries only for corporations, as Chap. 5 has already demonstrated.158 Viewed in a comparative light, Ahn’s argument appears weakened by relying on an overly broad interpretation that would extend the fiduciary duty of managers to stakeholders beyond the corporations .

Moreover, this argument is also undermined for the same reason that the duty of loyalty provision is insufficient to establish the fiduciary duty for stakeholders in Korea. Like Song, Choi observes that the process of establishing managerial liability vis-à-vis third parties (as well as the duty of loyalty) does not specifically consider implications for CSR.159 Additionally, Choi’s argument, which accepts—as Ahn does—managerial liability vis-à-vis the stakeholder, is apparently based on a misleading interpretation of US law. This book has already shown how American constituency statutes perform a facilitating role that allows managers to make business decisions favorable to CSR.160 This legislative mechanism does not aim to provide cause of action to stakeholders against managers, but rather to protect managers fulfilling their CSR obligations from the claims of shareholders.161

Under the Korean Commercial Act , managerial liability to third parties can comprise a cause of action only when damage to a third person was inflicted by the negligence of directors.162 If stakeholders seek to hold liable directors who disregard stakeholder interests, they must prove that their damage was the result of a negligent business decision. Indeed, it would be difficult to prove causation between stakeholder damage and managerial negligence. Managers cannot be fiduciaries for the stakeholder under Korean corporate law, and thus have no duty to consider stakeholder interests when making business decisions. Therefore, under contemporary Korean corporate law, stakeholders do not have any cause of action to claim for CSR against managers .


6.2.2.2 CSR Disclosure Regulation


In the United States, one major mandatory responsibility of the corporation to its stakeholders involves CSR disclosure regulations and enforcement thereof by the SEC.163 Indeed, the SEC can provide for CSR implementation by mandating transparency and truthfulness in corporate disclosures .164

Korean law may also achieve CSR implementation via its disclosure regulations. The Korean Commercial Act includes a disclosure regulation stipulating that “directors shall prepare … a business report”165 which “shall include important matters concerning the business.”166 This report, the Act stipulates, should be disclosed and inspected in public.167 A comprehensive CSR disclosure of the corporation would include relations with the local community, social and charitable contribution policy, information on the environment, labor policy, corporate governance, corporate ethics , etc.168 If CSR-related matters in these relations become important issues in regard to the business, then they should be disclosed in the business report and inspected in public.

However, it is difficult to find an argument in Korean legal scholarship that actively accepts this obligatory disclosure of CSR. Notwithstanding this qualification, Soo-Hyun Ahn merely emphasizes the importance of a mandatory regulation for CSR disclosure in terms of the risk that the corporation can optionally disclose nonfinancial information , and only when it is favorable to the corporation.169 Furthermore, Professor Dong-Seob Ahn argues that a mandatory CSR disclosure regulation would provide societally relevant information to stakeholders to be used to promote the improved CSR in Korea.170

It is not presently clear whether corporations will be required to disclose such information under Korean law due to the vagueness of the disclosure provision of the Korean Commercial Act . Presently, Korean corporations only voluntarily disclose their CSR information.171 Nevertheless, legally recognizing CSR as a matter crucial to the success of business will likely prove a turning point in efforts to mandate CSR compliance .


6.2.2.3 Small and Medium Enterprises Promotion Act


The two examples above, i.e., stakeholders can claim for CSR against managers and corporations should disclose CSR information, are the most progressive regulations that corporate scholars have argued for in Korea. However, these actions on their own would not provide sufficient regulatory protection for all constituencies. Strictly speaking, neither the fiduciary duty of managers nor disclosure regulation was expressly designed for purposes (or at least considerations) of CSR. In this regard, the 2012 amendment of the Small and Medium Enterprises Promotion Act appears as an especially progressive legislative move aimed at inducing CSR implementation in small- and medium-size corporations.

Through this Act, the terminology of CSR officially became a part of the Korean law, as the Act was revised to add some provisions regarding socially responsible management of a corporation.172 Article 2 of the Act defines CSR as a responsibility under which corporate decision making and activities transparently and ethically comply with the corporation’s influence on society and the surrounding environment.173 The Act further states that small and medium enterprises shall make an effort to consider their social responsibility toward employees, suppliers, consumers, and the community in their management, and state and local government may support these CSR activities.174 This is a remarkable and promising legislative development in itself. Even so, the Act does not establish comprehensive corporate jurisprudence on CSR nor does it aim to confirm the social nature of corporation, especially those large-scale public firms which wield comparatively more influence in society. While it aims to encourage corporations to consider their social responsibility, it is applicable to only small- and medium-size corporations; conversely, it also represents an opportunity to obtain support from the government rather than comprising a fundamental principle governing the managerial decision-making process. Similar to this Act, various Korean regulatory statutes requiring or encouraging certain “results,” “actions/process” and “structures” of corporate activities in order to protect economic, social, and environmental stakeholder considerations have already implemented a limited form of CSR. However, the field of corporate law itself has remained unresponsive to such regulatory advancement in Korea. The following section will demonstrate how Korean corporate law should seek to further this regulatory evolution of CSR and will consequently suggest a desirable legal scheme for CSR implementation.



6.3 Corporate Law for Guaranteeing CSR


Section 6.2 has demonstrated that although various Korean regulatory statutes implement CSR in a practical sense, it remains doubtful whether corporate law complies with those regulations. As the previous section revealed, Korean corporate law does not perform a regulatory function in terms of improving CSR.175 With this in mind, how must the law be modified so as to promote CSR, even when each individual regulatory statute continues to perform its own role to protect society?

There are various proposals for activating Korean corporate law to promote CSR, including the enactment of mandatory CSR disclosure176 and a codetermination system allowing for employee participation in management.177 These discussions are surely valuable for the future development of CSR-enhancing corporate legislation. However, the most critical and urgent task at hand is to establish the legislative foundation on which Korean corporate law would unambiguously recognize normative CSR, and to involve the entire Korean legal system in the movement to implement the principle. This would be the first step in enacting the necessary legislative reform. Corporate legislation should not obstruct current CSR implementation by scattering numerous laws among various areas. Ideally, legislators, jurists, and academics would work to develop and organize these individual laws in a systemic manner.

In order to establish such a foundation for instituting normative CSR, Korean jurisprudence must clarify the concept of normative CSR—specifically, whether CSR constitutes a discretionary right or an incumbent responsibility to serve society or both. If the law allows managers to make business decisions on behalf of their corporations that contribute to constituencies’ wealth, then CSR becomes a managerial right and corporations may thereby serve society at their discretion. On the other hand, if the law mandates managers to perform their administrative activities in a socially responsible manner or to consider constituencies’ wealth on behalf of their corporations, then CSR becomes a responsibility to serve society. Which aspect of CSR should be emphasized in Korean corporate law?


6.3.1 Right to Serve Society


Chapter 4 showed how US corporate law has implemented CSR mostly by enhancing the managerial power to make business decisions favorable to constituencies’ wealth.178 Dodd, one of the progenitors of CSR, contended that corporate law should enhance managerial power in relation to shareholders for the purpose of advancing CSR.179 In the meantime, the scope of CSR in US corporate law has expanded since the 1950s to include charitable contributions, the business judgment rule, and constituency statutes, all aimed at facilitating responsibility toward society by ensuring the legitimate freedom of business decisions .180 Admittedly, some US regulations designed to protect constituencies against corporate malpractice in the corporate governance and securities fraud sectors may restrict certain business behaviors.181 However, these laws traditionally have not been predominant in the corporate law, and their enforceability is questionable in the United States as well.182 While US law has evolved to provide various legislative regulatory devices for CSR, as shown in Greenfield’s aforementioned chart of regulatory efforts,183 corporate law has primarily sought to facilitate CSR implementation by empowering managers with the right to serve society. For over 80 years, the very foundation for CSR in American corporate law has established CSR as constituting that very right .

As for the lack of such a foundation for CSR

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