词条 | Lee Myung-hee |
释义 |
| name = | image = File:이명희 신세계그룹 회장 Lee Myung-Hee.png | caption = Lee in 2016 | birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1944|9|5|df=y}} | birth_place = Uiryeong, South Gyeongsang Province, Japanese Korea | nationality = South Korean | alma_mater = Ewha Womans University | occupation = Chairman of Shinsegae Group | spouse = Chung Jae-eun (1937-) | children = 2 including Chung Yong-jin | parents = Lee Byung-chul (1909-1987) Park Du-eul (1907-1999) | religion = | networth = US$1.7 billion (October 2018)[1] | module = {{Infobox Korean name | hangul = {{linktext|이|명|희}} | hanja = {{linktext|李|明|熙}} | rr = Lee Myeonghui | mr = I Myŏnghŭi | child = yes}} }}Lee Myung-hee ({{Korean|hangul=이명희}}; born 5 September 1944) is a South Korean business magnate and the chairwoman of the Shinsegae Group. She is youngest daughter of Lee Byung-chul, founder of the Samsung Group and the sister of its current chairman Lee Kun-Hee. Lee became the company's chairwoman in 1997 following its separation from Samsung and is credited for growing it into the country's second-largest retailer. With an estimated net worth of $1.5 billion she is one of the wealthiest people in South Korea and was ranked 20th on Forbes 2017 list of 50 Richest Koreans.[2] BiographyLee was born in Uiryeong County to Samsung founder Lee Byung-chul and his first wife Park Du-eul as the youngest of eight children. She attended Ewha Girls' High School and then majored in art at Ewha Womans University before marrying. After ten years of being a homemaker she became a sales executive at Shinsegae Department Store in 1979 and then its Chairwoman in 1997 after the company was separated from Samsung.[2] Financial scandalsDuring her time as chairwoman Lee has been fined on three separate occasions. The first was in 2006 for 350 billion won ($300 million) after she hid 800 billion wons worth of stock under different names. In 2012 by the Fair Trade Commission fined Lee 4 billion won ($3.4 million) for charging different transaction fees. Then in 2015 she was fined 70 billion won for hiding 380,000 company shares worth 80 billion won ($68 million) under different names.[2][3] References1. ^{{Citation | type = profile | url = https://www.forbes.com/profile/lee-myung-hee/?list=korea-billionaires | title = Lee Myung-Hee | journal = Forbes | access-date = 3 November 2017}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Lee, Myung-hee}}2. ^1 2 {{cite web|title=Lee Myung-hee|url=http://www.theinvestor.co.kr/people_detail.php?q=Lee%20Myung-hee&mode=rich&num=16|newspaper=The Investor|accessdate=3 November 2017}} 3. ^{{cite news|last1=Bae|first1=Ji-sook|title=Shinsegae chairwoman caught with borrowed-name stocks again|url=http://www.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20151110001123|accessdate=3 November 2017|newspaper=The Korea Herald|date=10 November 2015}} 12 : 1944 births|Living people|South Korean billionaires|Female billionaires|Ewha Womans University alumni|Samsung people|People from South Gyeongsang Province|South Korean women in business|20th-century South Korean businesspeople|21st-century South Korean businesspeople|20th-century businesswomen|21st-century businesswomen |
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。