Samsung union suspends strike as tentative deal reached

May 21, 2026 00:57 | News

Samsung Electronics’ union says it will suspend a planned strike after the two ‌sides reached a tentative pay deal, potentially averting action that threatened to disrupt the production of AI and other chips.

The labour union suspended the planned 18 days of strike action – scheduled to begin on Thursday – by nearly 48,000 of its members to put the tentative agreement to a vote by its members.

The vote will take place ‌from May 22 ‌to 27, ⁠union leader Choi Seung-ho told reporters.

An earlier notice posted on the union’s ​website had said it would happen from May 23 to 28.

Samsung Electronics said in a separate statement that the two parties had reached a tentative agreement on wages and collective bargaining and pledged to “build mature and constructive labour-management relations”.

The 11th-hour deal came after days of talks that broke down multiple times, ⁠including earlier on Wednesday when the union announced that ‌it would ​go ahead with the strike.

Talks restarted later in the day after South Korean Labour Minister Kim ​Young-hoon stepped in ‌to mediate.

The two sides had been at odds over how performance bonuses would be distributed ​between the conglomerate’s hugely profitable memory business and loss-making logic chip businesses, Reuters has previously reported.

Choi said they had agreed on how to distribute profit to loss-making businesses and would publish ​details ​of the tentative plan on the union’s ​website shortly.

He expects the union members to approve ‌the wage deal, he added.

“We will do our utmost to stabilise labor-management relations at Samsung Electronics going forward,” he said.

Samsung accounts for almost a quarter of South Korea’s exports and is also the world’s largest memory chip maker so production disruptions risk fuelling price rises at a time when the AI ​boom has caused shortages.

AAP News

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