Samsung Electronics fails to reach deal with union; PM says strike must be averted
The union says more than 41,000 workers may walk out after talks failed over performance bonuses tied to Samsung’s record chip profits.
- On Wednesday, Samsung Electronics and its South Korean labor union failed to reach a pay agreement, prompting union leaders to announce an 18-day strike beginning May 21 involving over 50,000 workers.
- Unions demand a 15 percent allocation of operating profit for bonuses without caps, while Samsung management maintains a 10 percent offer, citing concerns that removing caps undermines investment momentum.
- Industry officials warn the walkout threatens production of AI and other chips, with potential losses reaching 1 trillion won per day as Samsung competes in the global memory market.
- Samsung Electronics filed an injunction with the Suwon District Court seeking to ban the planned labor actions, with a ruling expected by May 20 before the strike begins.
- Semiconductors account for 38 percent of Korea's total exports, creating pressure for government intervention under labor law allowing a 30-day strike suspension if the action threatens the national economy.
51 Articles
51 Articles
Samsung wants its union back at the table. The union wants the bonus formula in writing.
A week after Samsung Electronics passed $1tn in market value, its largest union is preparing an 18-day strike that could disrupt the AI memory chips inside that valuation. The wage gap with SK Hynix is the spark. The bonus formula is the fight. Samsung Electronics sent a letter to its two largest unions on Thursday […] This story continues at The Next Web
Samsung Electronics, SKorean labor union fail to reach pay deal, strike looms
SEOUL — Samsung Electronics and its South Korean labor union failed to reach a pay deal on Wednesday, its union leader said, expecting over 50,000 workers would go ahead with a...
After days of negotiations mediated by the Government of South Korea, the union and the company's administration continue to split on performance bonuses, increasing concerns about a strike.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 37% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium


























