Korea plans to raise tax breaks for chipmakers, key industries

President Yoon ordered ministers to meet the demand for greater tax incentives, dubbing chips among Korea’s strategic assets

President Yoon looks at a photomask, used to produce a pattern on a substrate or a wafer, during a cabinet meeting
President Yoon looks at a photomask, used to produce a pattern on a substrate or a wafer, during a cabinet meeting
Dong-Wook Jwa 2
2022-12-30 16:40:25 leftking@hankyung.com
Business & Politics

The South Korean government plans to revise a recently passed bill aimed at supporting the country’s semiconductor sector and other key industries through increased tax incentives following a public outcry that state support measures have failed to meet expectations.

The finance ministry said on Friday it is considering raising tax breaks for chipmakers’ facility investment to at least 10% from the current 8%. The ministry plans to submit a revised bill to the National Assembly in January.

Under a revised tax law, which passed the parliament just last week, large companies are eligible for a tax credit of up to 8% from the previous 6% cap for their investment in chip manufacturing facilities. For mid-tier and small-sized firms, the tax benefit ceilings remain unchanged at 8% and 16%, respectively.

The revised tax breaks, however, are far below the ruling People Power Party’s proposal of 20% and the main opposition Democratic Party of Korea’s 10% proposal. In a Dec. 23 parliamentary session, lawmakers agreed to raise only the rate of tax incentives for large companies by two percentage points to 8%.

The ministry’s rare decision to submit an amendment to a new law that passed a week earlier comes after President Yoon Suk-yeol ordered ministers to reconsider tax benefits for chipmakers and other key industries.

President Yoon and his US counterpart Joe Biden tour Samsung Electronics' Pyeontaek chip plant in May, 2022,  guided by the group's Vice Chairman Jay Y. Lee
President Yoon and his US counterpart Joe Biden tour Samsung Electronics' Pyeontaek chip plant in May, 2022,  guided by the group's Vice Chairman Jay Y. Lee

“Strategic technologies, such as those in the semiconductor business, are Korea’s national security assets. I want the finance ministry, in consultation with other ministries, to consider offering further tax incentives to chipmakers and other key industries,” a presidential spokesman quoted President Yoon as telling a meeting of secretaries.

LATEST TAX BENEFIT ACT UNDER CRITICISM

Independent lawmaker Yang Hyang-ja last week criticized the government for the marginal tax credit hikes for chipmakers, urging President Yoon to keep his campaign pledge to significantly raise tax deductions on facility investments.

In August, a group of lawmakers led by Yang unveiled a new bill designed to triple the tax incentives for chipmakers, in a move to encourage more facility investment from the country's bread and butter industry.

Rep. Yang Hyang-ja, a former DPK member who is now an independent lawmaker
Rep. Yang Hyang-ja, a former DPK member who is now an independent lawmaker

The lawmakers had suggested the country raise the tax deduction rates for conglomerates to 20%, for medium-sized enterprises to 25%, and up to 30% for small and mid-sized companies.

The finance ministry and most conservative and liberal politicians opposed the idea, saying a significant hike in tax breaks for the semiconductor industry would lead to a drastic drop in overall corporate tax revenue.

The initial tax break proposal was aimed at creating Korea's version of Washington's CHIPS and Science Act of 2022.

Korea, home to the world’s two largest memory chipmakers, Samsung Electronics Co. and SK Hynix Inc., has promoted semiconductors as the backbone of its economy, but is slow to provide infrastructure and build a skilled workforce, said Yang, who defected from the main opposition party earlier this year.

Before joining the Democratic Party, she worked for Samsung as an executive in charge of flash memory chip development.

Write to Dong-Wook Jwa at leftking@hankyung.com
In-Soo Nam edited this article.

Why Korean chipmakers struggle with talent shortages

Why Korean chipmakers struggle with talent shortages

President Yoon Suk-yeol is looking at a photomask, used to produce a pattern on a substrate or a wafer, during a cabinet meeting on June 7 South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol on Tuesday lashed out at Vice Education Minister Chang Sang-wan during a cabinet meeting, after Chang pointed to regula

Korea may be backpedaling in semiconductor push: Lawmaker

Korea may be backpedaling in semiconductor push: Lawmaker

Samsung Electronics' chip clean room A sudden surge in demand for semiconductors post-pandemic, coupled with a prolonged chip shortage, has forced policymakers worldwide to revisit policies for nurturing talent and developing an ecosystem for the chip industry.South Korea, home to the world&rsq

Can Samsung Electronics ever catch up to foundry leader TSMC?

Can Samsung Electronics ever catch up to foundry leader TSMC?

Samsung is losing foundry ground to TSMC For years, Samsung Electronics Co. has been touted as the backbone of the South Korean economy, Asia’s fourth-largest, under the government’s push to foster the country’s chip industry as a global powerhouse.However, the Korean tech gia

Korean chipmakers tumble, wipe out $13 billion in market capitalization

Korean chipmakers tumble, wipe out $13 billion in market capitalization

SK Hynix's shares slump on a bearish industry outlook Shares of South Korea’s two largest chipmakers – Samsung Electronics Co. and SK Hynix Inc. – are slumping on a bearish industry outlook that chip demand could peak in the fourth quarter.Samsung Electronics, the largest stoc

(* comment hide *}