According to supplychaindigital.com, an 18-day strike at Samsung Electronics, involving 48,000 workers, is threatening to disrupt global memory chip supplies, removing between 3% and 4% of worldwide DRAM output from circulation. The walkout, set to begin on 21 May 2026, targets facilities in Pyeongtaek and Hwaseong, South Korea, which collectively produce 36% of global dynamic random-access memory (DRAM) and serve as key suppliers to artificial intelligence (AI) data centre operators.
Production Disruption and Facility Impact
Approximately 38% of Samsung’s domestic workforce is involved in the strike, with the company operating continuous three-shift production across its memory fabrication sites. A partial court injunction requires essential staffing levels to be maintained, but prior disruptions provide a warning: a one-day labour action in April led to a 58% drop in foundry output and an 18% decline in memory production, according to industry reports. The planned 18-day stoppage marks the largest work disruption in semiconductor industry history. Each silicon wafer scrapped during extended shutdowns costs approximately US$20,000, compounding financial losses.
Supply Chain and Market Consequences
The strike could reduce NAND flash memory supplies by 2% to 3%, according to Jeff Kim, analyst at KB Securities. Memory chip buyers typically maintain inventory buffers to absorb short-term shocks, but an 18-day production halt may deplete these reserves. With limited alternative suppliers for high-volume procurement, buyers may face competitive bidding for available stock. SK Hynix, the world’s second-largest memory chipmaker, could absorb some demand, but its facilities are already operating near capacity to meet existing AI hardware orders.
Compensation Dispute and Worker Demands
The strike stems from a dispute over compensation structures. The National Union of Samsung Electronics demands the removal of a 50% cap on performance bonuses and the establishment of a bonus pool equal to 15% of annual operating profit. In contrast, SK Hynix eliminated a 10-year bonus cap last year and allocated 10% of annual operating profit to bonuses. Based on 2026 profit forecasts, SK Hynix employees could receive average payouts between US$460,000 and US$477,000. Samsung paid no performance bonuses in 2024 due to operating losses in its chip unit, but the unit returned to profit in Q1 2026 with operating income nearly eightfold higher than the previous year. Despite this recovery, Samsung management has rejected the permanent removal of the bonus ceiling, proposing instead a one-off bonus exceeding SK Hynix’s levels.
Economic and Competitive Implications
An anonymous official at South Korea’s central bank estimates the strike could reduce the country’s projected 2.0% economic growth by 0.5 percentage points, assuming a loss of approximately 30 trillion won (US$19.9 billion) in chip production. Samsung accounts for nearly a quarter of South Korea’s exports. The ongoing disruption comes as SK Hynix approaches a US$1 trillion market valuation and secures contracts with major technology buyers. Any extended production halt at Samsung could accelerate a market share shift to its domestic rival, endangering Samsung’s 36% global DRAM market share as of the end of 2025.
“The planned 18-day stoppage represents the largest work disruption in semiconductor industry history.” — Supply Chain Digital, May 2026
The strike arrives at a critical juncture: semiconductor prices are recovering from a downturn in 2024, and AI infrastructure deployment continues to drive sustained demand. Further constraints on memory chip availability could fuel price increases across technology supply chains. The outcome of the compensation dispute will directly impact production continuity and Samsung’s ability to maintain its leadership in global semiconductor distribution.
Source: supplychaindigital.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










