House committee releases report accusing South Korea of discriminatory attacks on Coupang

A U.S. House committee on Wednesday released a 35-page report accusing South Korea of discriminatory attacks on e-commerce giant Coupang Inc. and other American companies.

The House Judiciary Committee issued the interim staff report titled "Closed for Competition: South Korea's Discriminatory Attacks on American-owned Businesses." It claims South Korea has a long history of economic discrimination against foreign companies through coercive tactics and massive fines intended to shield domestic firms.

The report cites Coupang as a consistent target, noting its market capitalization has fallen more than 40 percent following investigations. Last month South Korean authorities fined the company over $410 million, described as the largest ever imposed on a single firm.

The committee said it will continue oversight of such foreign regimes. Lobbying records show Coupang spent more than $1 million in the U.S. since the data leak scandal emerged in November, affecting over 33 million users.

Verwandte Artikel

Illustration depicting Coupang's $1.09 million lobbying push targeting U.S. White House, VP, and Congress amid South Korean data leak scandal.
Bild generiert von KI

Coupang discloses lobbying targeting White House, VP, Congress

Von KI berichtet Bild generiert von KI

U.S. lobbying reports show Coupang spent $1.09 million in the first quarter targeting the White House, Vice President, and Congress. This follows a major data leak scandal in South Korea last November. Though headquartered in Seattle and U.S.-incorporated, the company primarily operates in Korea.

E-commerce firm Coupang Inc. denied allegations that it lobbied U.S. government officials to pressure South Korea following a November data leak controversy. The company rejected claims of security-related lobbying as unfounded.

Von KI berichtet

In the latest escalation of tensions over South Korea's probe into Coupang's massive data breach, more than 80 ruling bloc lawmakers plan to send a joint letter protesting the US government's defense of the e-commerce giant, arguing it infringes on judicial sovereignty. The letter responds to recent US complaints, including demands for the safety of Coupang's chairman and a letter from over 50 Republican lawmakers.

Diese Website verwendet Cookies

Wir verwenden Cookies für Analysen, um unsere Website zu verbessern. Lesen Sie unsere Datenschutzrichtlinie für weitere Informationen.
Ablehnen