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1995 VAN FLEET AWARD
CHULSU KIM
Deputy Director-General
World Trade Organization
Citation
Chulsu
Kim joined the World Trade Organization as its deputy director-general on July
1, 1995. Before coming to Geneva, Kim pursued a long and distinguished career with
the Korean Government in the field of trade policy making and international
trade negotiation.
Kim received a B.A. in political science from Tufts University
in 1964 and later an M.A. and Ph.D. in political science from the University of Massachusetts. After completing graduate
school, he taught Political Science at Smith College and St. Lawrence University.
For more than 20 years, Kim has been professionally concerned
with international trade policy as a Korean government official. In 1973, he
joined the Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI) and subsequently served in
various positions. As assistant minister from 1984 to 1990, Kim was Korea's
chief trade negotiator, leading many of Korea's trade negotiation teams in both
bilateral and multilateral consultations.
In 1987, he was selected as chairman of the MTN
Negotiating Group in the GATT Uruguay Round and served for four years in that
position. As such, he was one of the handful of key officials who, in effect,
led the negotiations.
In 1990, Kim was appointed commissioner of the Korean
Intellectual Property Office (KIPO), a post which carried the rank of vice minister.
While at KIPO, he gained a reputation as a crusader for stronger protection of
intellectual property rights-not always a popular cause in Korea.
The next year, he was named president of the Korea Trade
Promotion Corporation (KOTRA), a state-run organization that seeks to expand
Korea's international trade. In a departure from tradition, he redirected
KOTRA's trade promotion effort to better serve the needs of Korea's small and medium-size
firms, which had often been neglected in the past.
In February 1993, the newly-inaugurated President Kim
Young Sam chose Kim to be his first minister of Trade, Industry and Energy. In
that capacity, Minister Kim played a prominent role in formulating and
implementing the administration's "New Economy Plan," which aims to deregulate
and "internationalize" the Korean economy through wide-ranging reforms. He
represented Korea at the 1993 and 1994 ministerial meetings of the
Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation group (APEC) and at the formal signing of the
Uruguay Round Final Act in Marrakesh, Morocco, in April 1994.
In December 1994, Kim resigned from the cabinet, and,
shortly thereafter, was appointed to the newly-created post of ambassador for international
trade by President Kim Young Sam.
Chulsu Kim was born in Seoul on January, 26, 1941. He is
married and the father of two children.
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