Samsung Wants Its Union Back at the Table
Samsung Electronics is asking its two largest unions to return to the negotiating table after two days of government-mediated talks broke down. The issue at hand? A 18-day strike scheduled to begin on May 21st, sparked by a dispute over the bonus formula.
The Union’s Demands:
The National Samsung Electronics Union seeks to institutionalize and formalize the bonus formula in writing, aiming for a 7% base wage increase and removal of the existing cap on performance bonuses.
The union argues that SK Hynix, their rival, has already agreed to remove its bonus cap and allocate 10% of annual operating profit directly to staff.
The Background
Samsung’s chip division, driving the company’s $1tn valuation, is facing a crucial moment. A strike by the union could disrupt production of AI memory chips, potentially impacting Nvidia’s supply chain.
"The wage gap with SK Hynix is the spark. The bonus formula is the fight."
Samsung has offered a one-time bonus and a profit share equal to about 13% of the chip division’s operating profit, but the union remains unyielding.
Key Takeaways
- Striking Workers: Approximately 36,000 members of the National Samsung Electronics Union, representing 30% of Samsung Electronics’ workforce.
- Bonus Formula: Central to the dispute, with the union pushing for transparency and institutionalization.
- Impact: A potential strike could disrupt production of AI memory chips, affecting Nvidia’s supply chain.
- Government Intervention: The Korean prime minister has called an emergency meeting, and the central labour relations commission is attempting to mediate talks on Saturday.