Michael Schuman, Columnist

What South Korea’s 1997 Meltdown Can Teach China in 2017

Two decades after the Asian financial crisis and nine years after the global meltdown, Beijing is reckoning with a private borrowing extravaganza of its own.
Photo illustration: 731; Photographer: Jonas Ekstromer/AP Photo

By 1997, the South Koreans were pretty cocky, and for good reason. For 30 years, the East Asian country had been one of history’s economic marvels, transforming itself from a poor, war-torn wasteland into a rich industrial powerhouse. The economy wasn’t perfect: Korea’s big companies were prone to amassing too much debt and investing it in outlandish projects. But the Koreans had shrugged off such problems again and again. The future seemed secure.

It wasn’t. On July 2, 1997—almost exactly 20 years ago—­authorities in Thailand relinquished their control over the national currency, the baht. With market watchers already anxious it would plunge in value, the move tipped off the Asian financial crisis, an economic storm that crashed through Thailand, Malaysia, and Indonesia, then slammed into South Korea as it spread tremors across the globe. In Korea companies tumbled into bankruptcy, and banks were gutted. Its cupboard of foreign currency stripped nearly bare, the government was forced into an embarrassing International Monetary Fund bailout. The message was clear: No economy, no matter how brilliant its performance, is impervious to a financial crisis when policymakers fail to control risk.