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South Korean President Moon Jae-in attends Samsung Electronics’ announcement of its “system semiconductor vision” at a production plant in Hwaseong, Gyeonggi Province, on Apr. 30. (Blue House photo pool)
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Nine government ministries draw up plans for fostering new industry
The Moon Jae-in administration announced its own system semiconductor “vision and strategy” to align with Samsung’s announcement of investment plans. The measures are to involve restarting efforts to foster the system semiconductor industry, which have failed a number of times in the past due to overly optimistic predictions. The emphasis was placed on generating demand, with the administration and private corporations entrusting the necessary system semiconductor technology design to domestic fabless firms specializing in system semiconductor design – an area where creative technology is an important element. On May 1, nine government ministries – including the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy (MOTIE), the Ministry of Economy and Finance (MOEF), the Ministry of Education (MOE), and the Ministry of Science and ICT (MSIT) – released a list of five “intensive countermeasures” in the area of system semiconductors, with the objection of achieving a 10% share of the fabless market, world number one status for foundries, and the creation of 27,000 jobs by 2030. First among them is the fostering of fabless businesses as the key players in the system semiconductor industry, which involves small-scale production of a wide variety of items. Only one South Korean company – Silicon Works – is counted among the world’s top 50 fabless businesses, while 70% of the market is held by US companies such as Qualcomm, Nvidia, and AMD. The situation contrasts with the foundry market (commissioned production of designed semiconductors), where Samsung Electronics is in pursuit of the current global number one, Taiwan’s TSMC.
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Global semiconductor market and current South Korean semiconductor exports
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