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With a full-scale strike by the Samsung Electronics union looming after a second round of post-adjustment talks collapsed, attention has shifted to what comes next. Employment and Labor Minister Kim Young-hoon has stepped in to mediate directly. The main sticking point was institutionalizing performance bonuses — notably removing the cap and tying payouts to an N% of operating profit. Because labor and management had already narrowed many of their differences on this issue, the breakdown in talks is especially regrettable.
If the strike occurs, the economic fallout would be broad and severe. Losses could reach as much as 100 trillion KRW (approximately 75 billion USD). The Bank of Korea forecasts that growth this year could fall by 0.5 percentage point. Samsung Electronics alone accounts for more than 20% of South Korea’s exports, so the damage would be substantial. There is also concern that global big-tech customers, which tightly manage supply-chain stability, could lose confidence.
The greatest concern is that the push to formalize an \”N% of operating profit\” bonus at Samsung could spill over into shipbuilding, power equipment and heavy industry. If it spreads, the issue could ignite broader labor confrontations this summer. Firms with strong earnings fear a ripple—or \”butterfly\”—effect from the outcome of these talks. Public sentiment has largely cooled; many see the unions as pursuing narrow, exclusive gains, which has undermined public sympathy.
A shareholders’ group has also argued that any deal linking bonuses to operating profit, absent shareholder approval at a general meeting, would be legally invalid. It has warned it will bring civil damage claims against union leaders and participating members. On the 20th, President Lee Jae-myung said, \”It’s good that some labor unions use their rights to organize and take collective action to advance their interests, but there should be appropriate limits.\” He added that resolving the dispute without resorting to last-resort measures, such as invoking the government’s emergency arbitration powers, would be preferable. The ramifications of Samsung’s labor talks are far-reaching in Korean society and require more fundamental review and concrete policy proposals.











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