The cultural industry policies of the Korean government and the Korean Wave
Seung-Ho Kwon & Joseph Kim
The paper examines how the Korean government promoted Korea’s cultural industries over the last 20 years. In the early 1990s, there was a radical departure in the government’s cultural industry policy, from that of political control over the cultural industries to viewing them as central to the government’s export-focused economic development strategies. The policy of developing the cultural industries was implemented in conjunction with government investment in other strategic industries, such as the information and communication technology industries. In the 2000s, the domestic market for cultural products expanded and diversified rapidly as the Korean society enjoyed improved living standards and a growing middle class demanded improved quality from Korea’s cultural products. The rapid development of other industries also facilitated the enhanced competitiveness of Korean cultural products in global markets. As a result, Korea’s cultural industries made substantial inroads into East-Asian markets in the late 1990s and into global markets in the 2000s.
კატეგორია:
ტომი:
2
წელი:
2014
გამოცემა:
4
გამომცემლობა:
International Journal of Cultural Policy
ენა:
english
გვერდები:
20
სერია:
International Journal of Cultural Policy
ფაილი:
PDF, 230 KB
IPFS:
,
english, 2014