Kim Chung-yum explained

Kim Chung-yum
Native Name Lang:ko
Office:South Korean Ambassador to Japan
Term Start:January 1979
Term End:September 1980
Office1:Chief Presidential Secretary
Term Start1:1969
Term End1:1979
Predecessor1:Lee Hu-rak
Successor1:Kim Gye-won
Office2:Minister of Commerce and Industry[1]
Term Start2:3 October 1967
Term End2:20 October 1969
Predecessor2:Park Choong-hoon
Successor2:Lee Nak-sun
Office3:Minister of Finance[2]
Term Start3:January 1966
Term End3:September 1966
Predecessor3:Hong Seung-hi
Successor3:Kim Hak-ryeol
Birth Date:3 January 1924
Birth Place:Keijō, Keiki-dō, Korea, Empire of Japan
Party:Democratic Republican
United Liberal Democrats
Alma Mater:Clark University
Width:130px
Hangul:김정렴
Rr:Gim Jeong-nyeom
Mr:Kim Chŏng-nyŏm

Kim Chung-yum (; 3 January 1924 – 25 April 2020) was a South Korean politician. Under President Park Chung-hee, he was the longest serving chief presidential secretary in South Korean history.[3] He also served as Minister of Finance and Minister of Commerce and Industry, playing a leading role in the country's miraculous economic development.[4]

Kim died on April 25, 2020.[5]

Publications

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 역대장관 - 산업통상자원부 홈페이지. motie.go.kr.
  2. Web site: Ministry of Strategy and Finance. Ministry of Strategy and. Finance. english.mosf.go.kr.
  3. Web site: The man who could have stopped Park's killing. Korea JoongAng Daily.
  4. Book: Clifford, Mark L.. Troubled Tiger: Businessmen, Bureaucrats and Generals in South Korea. 5 December 2016. Routledge. 9781315293233. Google Books.
  5. https://www.mnews.joins.com/amparticle/23763191 김정렴 전 비서실장 별세···"차지철도 꼼짝못한 박정희정부 실세"
  6. News: New Books. The Korea Herald . 23 June 2011. 이다영 .