Founder of Taiwan’s largest manufacturing conglomerate, Wang Yung-ching, dies

Written by Writer on Thursday, October 16th, 2008

Founder of Taiwan’s largest manufacturing , Wang Yung-ching, dies

AP
Thursday, October 16, 2008

TAIPEI, Taiwan –– Wang Yung-ching, a businessman who built his in to Taiwan’s biggest and most profitable manufacturing , has died, the group said Thursday. He was 91.

Wang died Wednesday during a business trip to the United States, Formosa Plastics said in a brief statement. reported that Wang died of in a New Jersey hospital.

A farmer’s son with only an , Wang set up a rice store with his two brothers in his early 20s. He then established the . in 1954 with a loan from a U.S. aid program.

Forbes listed Wang as the island’s second this year, with a estimated at US$6.8 billion.

Known widely as the “God of Management,” Wang expanded his plastics and empire and diversified into electronics, cosmetics, hospitals and car manufacturing.

A strong proponent of closer with , Wang invested in and plastics factories on the . Formosa Plastics also set up chemical companies in the U.S. and owns several and properties rich in natural gas in Texas.

A recent survey by Chunghwa Credit Information Service listed as Taiwan’s most profitable , with 219 billion New (US$6.7 billion) in profits after tax last year.

Wang is said to have lived an , staying in an apartment inside his group’s headquarters in downtown Taipei. The corporate culture of “thrifty and hardworking” is believed to have contributed to the group’s .

Ma Ying-jeou praised Wang for his “outstanding contributions to Taiwan” and for promoting a vision of peace and prosperity with China, Ma’s office said.

But Wang’s group has been criticized by environmentalists.

Formosa Plastics was accused in 1998 of dumping 3,000 tons of waste contaminated with high levels of mercury near the Cambodian port city of Sihanoukville, causing a local panic. The company later agreed to ship the waste back to Taiwan.

Formosa Plastics said Wang assigned seven senior managers to run the group in 2006 and they will continue to oversee operations collectively following his death.

Wang is survived by his wife, Lee Pao-chu, two sons and eight daughters.

His eldest son, Winston Wang, runs Grace T.H.W., a group active in and electronics in China.

Daughter Cher Wang and her husband, Chen Wen-chi, manage chip developer VIA Technologies Inc.

The tycoon’s brother, Wang Yung-tsai, has been closely involved in the running of .

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