Labor Ministry: “We need social dialogue”…Industry Ministry: “Now we must focus investment”
Blue House supports public debate while the People Power Party says it “undermines the market economy”
Reinvestment and redistribution clash over the use of semiconductor profits
[Asia Times=Reporter Park Seo-hyun] A growing rift has appeared among government ministries over how to handle excess profits at major semiconductor firms — a debate ignited by a labor dispute at Samsung Electronics. As political actors enter the discussion, controversy over the “social distribution of semiconductor excess profits” is intensifying.

On May 29, Trade, Industry and Energy Minister Kim Jung-gwan wrote on social media that “the race in the artificial intelligence (AI) era will be decided by overwhelming speed and scale,” and that “now is a pivotal moment to channel the profits generated by the semiconductor industry into productive reinvestment for the future.” He warned that “even a single missed investment opportunity could destabilize the industrial ecosystem and push our companies onto an irreversible path of decline,” adding, “what we need now is decisiveness, not hesitation; concentration, not dispersion.”
Minister Kim’s comments are being read as the Industry Ministry’s response to Labor Minister Kim Young-hoon’s call for discussion on the “social distribution of excess profits by large corporations.” At a May 27 press briefing, Labor Minister Kim said, “The only viable solution for socially distributing large firms’ excess profits is social dialogue,” and announced plans for an emergency forum hosted by the Labor Ministry on June 1.
The Blue House has signaled support for airing the issue publicly. In a recent briefing, Blue House spokesperson Kang Yoo-jung said, “The labor minister raised the need for performance-based distribution from a labor policy perspective, while the industry minister will view excess operating profits and profit issues from an industry standpoint.” She added, “The Blue House hopes the upcoming forum will create space for broad public discussion.”
The main opposition People Power Party pushed back immediately. Choi Bo-yoon, the party’s central campaign publicity chief, said in a statement that the proposal represents “a dangerous step toward state intervention that would shake the foundations of a free-market economy,” arguing that “it is rare to find any country where the government defines which portion of a company’s profit is normal and which is excess, then plans to redistribute that excess socially.”
Rep. Choi Eun-seok also criticized the idea, saying, “The notion that companies bear the risks while the government redistributes the gains contradicts market principles.” Rep. Yoon Sang-hyun warned that “the logic of socially reclaiming excess profits could threaten the competitiveness of South Korea’s core industries.”











Most Commented