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BackSamsung Union, Management Resume Wage Talks Amid Strike Threat
Samsung Union, Management Resume Wage Talks Amid Strike Threat
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Yonhap News5/18/2026Business3 min readSouth Korea

Samsung Union, Management Resume Wage Talks Amid Strike Threat

Quick Look

  • Samsung Electronics' largest union and management resumed government-led wage talks Monday, aiming to avert a strike over performance bonuses.
  • A court partially blocked the strike, requiring production to be maintained, but the union plans to proceed.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Samsung Electronics and its largest labor union are in negotiations over performance-based bonuses. The union is demanding fixed bonuses and the removal of payout caps, while management proposes maintaining the current system with modifications.

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By Kim Han-joo

SEOUL, May 18 (Yonhap) -- Samsung Electronics Co. and its largest labor union resumed government-led wage mediation talks Monday in a last-ditch effort to avert a strike at the world's largest memory chipmaker.

The talks restarted days after the first round of government-mediated negotiations collapsed over performance-based bonuses, ahead of an 18-day strike scheduled to begin Thursday.

"We will participate in this second round in good faith," Choi Seung-ho, head of Samsung Electronics' largest labor union, told reporters at the National Labor Relations Commission office in Sejong, about 110 kilometers south of Seoul.

"(Negotiations) will be carried out through tomorrow," Park Soo-keun, chairman of the committee, said, noting that both sides are expected to present their proposals in the afternoon.

Labor and management remained sharply divided over performance-based bonuses tied to earnings from the company's artificial intelligence (AI)-related semiconductor business amid the ongoing memory supercycle.

Management has proposed maintaining the current excess profit incentive system while allowing the bonus pool to be calculated based on either 10 percent of operating profit or economic value added, known as EVA. The company also proposed introducing a special compensation system, saying it would help create a more flexible incentive structure.

The union, however, is demanding fixed performance bonuses equal to 15 percent of the semiconductor division's operating profit and the removal of payout caps.

Later Monday, a district court partially accepted Samsung Electronics' request for an injunction to block the planned walkout, ordering the union to ensure that any strike does not disrupt production.

The Suwon District Court said staffing to prevent potential damage to safety-related and other facilities, and its products must be maintained at usual levels.

It also restricted the company's largest union from taking over the company's facilities or preventing workers from entering them in a decision effectively accepting many of the company's requests.

In response, the largest union said it respect's the court's decision but made clear the strike will proceed as planned.

Industry observers say if a walkout occurs, losses to the South Korean economy can reach up to 100 trillion won (US$66.7 billion), given the country's heavy reliance on semiconductor exports.

Government officials have raised concern over the strike, suggesting Seoul may invoke emergency arbitration powers to prevent the strike. This has prompted backlash from labor groups.

Under South Korean law, the labor minister can issue an emergency arbitration order if a dispute is deemed likely to harm the national economy or seriously disrupt the lives of ordinary people.

Such an order would suspend industrial action for 30 days while the National Labor Relations Commission conducts mediation and arbitration.

Earlier in the day, President Lee Jae Myung said that companies' management rights should be respected as much as labor rights.

"In South Korea, which has adopted the basic orders of democracy and free market economy, labor should be respected as much as companies, and corporate management rights should also be respected as much as labor rights," Lee posted on his X account.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • The strike will proceed as planned.

    Possible · Within days

  • The South Korean government may invoke emergency arbitration powers.

    Possible · Within days

Open Questions

  • Will the union and management reach an agreement in the ongoing talks?
  • Will the South Korean government invoke emergency arbitration powers?
  • What will be the exact impact on production if the strike proceeds?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Yonhap News.

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