Possibility of strike looms at Samsung as gov't wage arbitration fails
SEOUL, Feb. 14 (Yonhap) -- The state labor relations commission decided Monday to stop mediating wage negotiations between management and unionists at Samsung Electronics Co., raising the possibility of a walkout for the first time at the nation's largest conglomerate.
The National Labor Relations Commission failed to successfully bring the two parties to an agreement following two arbitration efforts in less than a week.
With the decision, the unions can go ahead with a walkout if their members vote for it.
If that happens, it would be the first strike at the world's largest memory chip and mobile phone maker since it was founded in 1969.
Lee Jae-yong, Samung Group's de facto leader and vice chairman at Samsung Electronics, scrapped the conglomerate's "no labor union" policy in May 2020.
The company's four union groups formed a collective bargaining group and have been talking with management since October. They demanded the company offer an annual salary increase of 10 million won (US$8,354) per employee and fully disclose its incentive system, among other things. The company did not accept the demand.
"The top management of Samsung Electronics Co. should now come forward to directly talk with the union (to solve the wage issue)," the labor group said in a press release.
The company said it will "sincerely talk to the union."
The biggest union among the four is said to have approximately 4,500 members, about 4 percent of the company's workforce of 114,000.

Labor unionists at Samsung Electronics Co. head to a wage negotiation meeting at the National Labor Relations Commission in the central administrative city of Sejong, some 160 kilometers south of Seoul, on Feb. 14, 2022. (Yonhap)
jaeyeon.woo@yna.co.kr
(END)
-
Nuclear envoys of S. Korea, U.S., Japan condemn N. Korea's stipulation of nuclear policy
-
BTS' Jungkook to drop 2nd solo single
-
Opposition leader Lee again proposes talks with President Yoon
-
BTS' Jungkook to release first solo album 'Golden'
-
Royal palaces in Seoul available for free during Chuseok holiday
-
Unification ministry uses metaverse to recreate hometowns of elderly S. Koreans hailing from North
-
Police launch belated probe into another teacher's suicide after parental harassment
-
(LEAD) S. Korea's Coast Guard apprehends 22 Chinese after illegal entry attempt
-
(LEAD) N. Korea stipulates nuclear force-building policy in constitution
-
79 pct of young S. Koreans agree on need to improve ties with Japan: poll
-
Defense ministry warns N. Korea will face end of regime in event of nuclear use attempt
-
(LEAD) S. Korea's Coast Guard apprehends 22 Chinese after illegal entry attempt
-
N. Korea slams U.S. over Pentagon document calling regime 'persistent' threat
-
(Asiad) S. Korea beat 10-man Uzbekistan in men's football semis, reach brink of 3rd straight gold
-
(LEAD) U.S. House votes to remove Speaker McCarthy after pushback over stopgap spending measure