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    12.05 (금)

    S. Korea’s unicorn drought is a warning sign for its innovation future

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    (Yonhap)

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    The rise of so-called “unicorns” — privately held startups valued at more than $1 billion — has long served as a barometer of a nation’s innovation vitality. Yet South Korea’s numbers are flashing red.

    Over the past four years, while the United States added 229 new unicorns, South Korea managed to produce just two, according to data from the Korea Chamber of Commerce and Industry. As of October, South Korea counts only 13 unicorns in total, ranking 11th globally. The U.S. alone hosts 717, more than half of the world’s 1,276.

    The gap isn’t just in quantity — it’s in quality. The leading 10 unicorn nations are minting billion-dollar firms in cutting-edge fields such as artificial intelligence and digital solutions. South Korea, by contrast, still leans heavily on consumer and retail ventures, which make up 41.6 percent of its unicorns. Only 15.4 percent operate in AI or software. Korean startups also take more than eight years on average to reach unicorn status — two years longer than the global norm.

    This is not merely a statistical lag; it’s a structural one. Every step up the corporate ladder — from small to midsize to large company — brings a new tangle of regulations. Labor laws, fair-trade rules, and tax codes all tighten in ways that punish growth. The moment a company succeeds, the system makes it harder to keep succeeding.

    Over-regulation of corporate venture capital (CVC) adds another choke point. When holding companies face debt-to-equity caps of 200 percent and restrictions on outside funding, innovation capital dries up. Promising startups can’t raise funds, and large firms can’t invest in new growth engines.

    If South Korea wants to stay competitive in the age of AI, it must reverse course. Outdated rules that penalize scale and risk-taking need to go. Growth-stage regulation should be rebuilt from scratch, and the CVC framework modernized to allow freer flow of investment capital.

    Without decisive structural reform, the country’s next generation of innovators won’t just be slower — they’ll be gone. The next unicorns will be born elsewhere.
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