Will Samsung Electronics Strike a Deal? Key Negotiations Ahead of Potential Strike on May 21
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Samsung Electronics and its union, which have been at odds over bonus payment criteria and efforts to formalize the system, returned to talks a day before a planned general strike.
At 10 a.m. on the 20th, Samsung Electronics and the union will hold a private third post-mediation meeting at the Central Labor Commission in the Sejong Government Complex.
The second meeting, which began on the 18th, continued until about 12:30 a.m. on the 19th but ended without a final agreement. As talks extended, the Central Labor Commission suspended the session and scheduled a third meeting to resume negotiations.
The central question is whether the two sides can reach a provisional agreement.
After the suspension, Park Su-geun, chairman of the Central Labor Commission, told reporters, \”There are several contentious issues, and we failed to reach agreement on the most important one,\” adding, \”The management side will finalize its position and come to tomorrow’s meeting.\”
Industry observers say the turning point will be whether Samsung’s management accepts the adjustment proposed by the Central Labor Commission. If management agrees, the parties would draft a provisional agreement and the union would then hold a ratification vote among members to determine final acceptance.
If management rejects the proposal or union members vote it down, the general strike announced by the National Samsung Electronics Labor Union (JeonSamNo) and the cross-company Samsung Group union’s Samsung Electronics branch could begin on the 21st.
The unions have demanded transparency in bonus funds, elimination of payout caps and formalization of the bonus system, and they have announced plans for an 18-day general strike from the 21st through June 7.
However, the Central Labor Commission could present an additional adjustment, and the parties might reconsider whether to accept it.
Officials say the meeting is likely to reach a conclusion in the morning, given the need to decide on strike action and subsequent procedures. They also noted that a provisional agreement would require time for the union’s internal voting process.
The government has expressed concern about the potential impact of disrupted Samsung Electronics semiconductor production on the national economy and has indicated it could consider invoking emergency mediation powers if the strike materializes.











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