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Top policymakers call for prompt settlement of Samsung labour dispute

By IANS | Updated: May 14, 2026 09:15 IST

Seoul, May 14 South Korea's top economic and financial policymakers on Thursday called for the prompt settlement of ...

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Seoul, May 14 South Korea's top economic and financial policymakers on Thursday called for the prompt settlement of a labor dispute at Samsung Electronics, warning that a possible strike could threaten the country's economy amid a semiconductor supercycle.

Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol and other heads of financial authorities made the joint remarks during a meeting on the potential fallout from a planned walkout by Samsung Electronics workers, according to the Ministry of Finance and Economy.

The meeting was attended by Bank of Korea Gov. Shin Hyun-song; Lee Eog-weon, chairman of the Financial Services Commission; and Lee Chan-jin, governor of the Financial Supervisory Service, reports Yonhap news agency.

"The participants expressed concern that a strike by Samsung Electronics workers could pose a significant risk to economic growth, exports and the financial market," the finance ministry said in a release.

"They highlighted that there should never be a strike and that the issue should be promptly settled through principle-based negotiations," it added.

Samsung Electronics and its workers failed to reach an agreement Wednesday after two days of government-led mediation talks that had been viewed as a last-ditch effort to avert a strike scheduled for May 21.

The union has demanded performance bonuses equivalent to 15 percent of operating profit, along with the removal of the payout cap and the formal institutionalisation of the bonus system amid the company's record-breaking earnings during the global artificial intelligence boom.

Management, meanwhile, proposed allocating 10 percent of operating profit to bonuses and offering a one-time special compensation package that it said exceeds industry standards.

Touching on the financial market, the participants said the recent volatility in South Korea's foreign exchange market has been excessive relative to the country's economic fundamentals, due mainly to foreign investors' selling of local shares and speculative trading.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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