Buyout Mania American firms are buying European companies, slashing jobs, boosting profits. Are they sinners or saviors?
Road Warriors Hyundai chairman Chung Mong Koo steers South Korea's largest carmaker away from its checkered past and toward a global success story
Profiteers While Europe struggles with stagnant growth and rising unemployment, many corporations are enjoying robust profits by cutting costs and sending more jobs abroad

The New Rand Lords [June 6, 2005]
Chrysler's Comeback [Nov. 9, 1992]
China's Spending Spree [May 16, 2005]
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ON THE LINE Hyundai's new Alabama plant
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 manufacturing

One For The Road

Once synonymous with "cheap," Hyundai, South Korea's biggest car company, now emphasizes quality — and is taking on the world
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Posted Sunday, June 24, 2005; 14.55BST
Chung Mong Koo, chairman of south Korea's Hyundai Motor, carefully scrutinizes a newly designed gearshift lever for the automaker's Sonata sedan while his entire senior management team hovers around, anxiously awaiting his approval. The execs are justifiably edgy. Engineers added a plastic plate beneath the shifter to prevent spilled coffee and other flotsam from falling into the mechanism and gumming it up.

It's a minor change, but no one is treating it that way, least of all Chung, a hard-nosed, detail-oriented boss with a penchant for micromanagement. ("He still makes the decision on how big a Christmas tree to put in the lobby," quips one former Hyundai executive.) After eyeballing the plastic plate from several angles, Chung demands, "Is this enough?" He's worried that the gizmo won't do its job. Finally, he nods his O.K., but reminds his executives: "We can't allow any defects to damage our cars."

Chung, 67, has spent six years hammering this zero-defects message into the heads of Hyundai's employees — and the result has been one of the most surprising turnabouts in automotive history. A few years ago, Hyundai, South Korea's largest car manufacturer, was a synonym for "shoddy." Seoul was the only place in the world where you were likely to see large numbers of its cars on the street. Today, the company's line of pleasantly stylish, relatively inexpensive and certifiably reliable sedans and sport-utility vehicles is tailgating the industry's best-known brands in several prime markets. In the U.S., where the Sonata offers a lower-priced alternative to Toyota's Camry and Honda's Accord, Hyundai's sales reached 419,000 cars last year — up 360% since 1998. In Europe, sales spurted 21% in 2004. In India, Hyundai's 17% share of the passenger-car market made it the largest foreign automaker in 2004 and the second biggest car company overall behind Maruti, a Suzuki subsidiary. Hyundai is beating competitors by modifying its small cars with features designed for Indian customers, like elevated rooflines to provide more headroom for turban-wearing motorists.

Perhaps most surprising: in China's hotly contested emerging car market, Hyundai's operation sold more cars than any other foreign joint venture in the first quarter, according to Singapore's AutoAsia, an automotive data company. In fact, with a compounded annual revenue growth of 20% over the past five years, Hyundai has been the world's fastest-growing major automaker since 1999, according to Lehman Bros. Hyundai is "putting pressure on everybody," says Rob Hinchliffe, an auto analyst at UBS. Indeed, even Toyota vice chairman Fujio Cho last year acknowledged the blur that is getting bigger in his rearview mirror. "Hyundai has quality and prices that have caught customers' attention, not to mention ours."

Continued ...

New Rand Lords [June 6, 2005]
South Africa's blacks join a club that once excluded them

Building Up [June 6, 2005]
How new infrastructure projects are taking off

Power Play [June 6, 2005]
Bringing power to Africa's poor in simple, creative ways

Brand Aid, Not Band-Aid [June 6, 2005]
Does Africa need an image makeover, asks Peter Gumbel

Oriental Vintage [March 5, 2005]
Determined to overcome a reputation for noxious wine, the Chinese dream of producing classic vintages

Scoring with Gol [March 5, 2005]
How a start-up Brazilian discount carrier is grounding the competition

Trading Places [March 5, 2005]
VIEWPOINT: Recent Rulings put the embattled WTO on the same side as its critics, says TIME's Peter Gumbel

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FROM THE AUGUST 1, 2005 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE; POSTED SUNDAY, JUNE 24, 2005.

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