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Samsung Uses Legal Threats to Kill Massive Chip Strike

Samsung Uses Legal Threats to Kill Massive Chip Strike

Eriki Joan UgunushebyEriki Joan Ugunushe
37 seconds ago
in Tech
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​A major labour battle in South Korea took a massive turn today, a local court stepped in to block a planned 18-day walkout at Samsung Electronics, the world’s biggest maker of memory chips. The decision has severely weakened the power of the workers’ unions right before they were set to strike. After the court announcement, investors breathed a sigh of relief, causing Samsung shares to jump by more than 4 per cent on Monday.

Table of Contents

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  • ​A Rare Court Decision
  • ​The Massive AI Boom
  • ​A Massive Supercycle
  • Corporations Are Shifting the Rules

​A Rare Court Decision

​The Suwon District Court partially approved a request from Samsung management to limit the upcoming strike, which was scheduled to start this Thursday. Judge Shin Woo-jung ruled that the unions cannot fully shut down operations. He stated that the factories must maintain normal staffing levels to protect safety, prevent equipment damage, and keep product quality steady.

​Furthermore, the court barred the pan-Samsung union and its leader, Choi Seung-ho, from blocking factory entrances or occupying company buildings. If the union breaks these new rules, they face a staggering fine of 100 million won ($74,000) for every single day they violate the order. Legal experts say this rare ruling basically strips the union of its negotiating power, making a major disruption to global chip production highly unlikely.

Samsung Uses Legal Threats to Kill Massive Chip Strike

​The Massive AI Boom

​The core of this intense dispute is about how to share the massive wealth being generated by the current Artificial Intelligence boom. Samsung workers are demanding that the company scrap its current cap on bonuses. Instead, they want Samsung to legally lock a rule into their contracts that gives 15 per cent of the company’s operating profit directly to employee bonuses. Union leaders estimated that a total, unchecked strike could cost the tech giant up to 30 trillion won. Prime Minister Kim Min-seok warned that a complete factory shutdown would cause “unimagined” damage to the country’s economy.

​A Massive Supercycle

Due to severe global chip shortages, Samsung’s total market value recently crossed $1 trillion. Together with its rival SK Hynix, the two companies are expected to make 600 trillion won in profit this year, which is nearly a quarter of South Korea’s entire economy.

Corporations Are Shifting the Rules

​Using the legal system to cripple a strike before it even begins is a direct attack on basic workers’ rights. When a court steps in and says you can strike, but you aren’t allowed to actually pause production or block a factory entrance, they are making the strike completely useless. A strike only works when it creates leverage by interrupting business as usual. By stripping workers of that tool, the court is essentially acting as an extension of Samsung’s corporate board.

​The government’s heavy involvement shows a deeply unfair double standard. Top officials are quick to warn that a strike will cause “unimaginable economic damage,” but they stay completely silent about the unimaginable wealth hoarding happening at the top. When just two tech companies control a quarter of a nation’s economy because of an AI boom, the everyday workers who keep those dangerous, high-tech factories running 24/7 deserve a fair share of the profits.

​Telling workers to accept a bonus cap while company shares double and market values cross a trillion dollars is insulting. The union is absolutely right to ask if the government is a neutral mediator or just a spokesperson for Samsung. If a business is too critical to be allowed to pause for a labour dispute, then it is too critical to allow executives to shortchange the human beings who actually build the product.
​

Tags: BusinessChip Strikefederal characterNewsSamsungTech
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Eriki Joan Ugunushe

Eriki Joan Ugunushe

Eriki Joan Ugunushe is a dedicated news writer and an aspiring entertainment and media lawyer. Graduated from the University of Ibadan, she combines her legal acumen with a passion for writing to craft compelling news stories.Eriki's commitment to effective communication shines through her participation in the Jobberman soft skills training, where she honed her abilities to overcome communication barriers, embrace the email culture, and provide and receive constructive feedback. She has also nurtured her creativity skills, understanding how creativity fosters critical thinking—a valuable asset in both writing and law.

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