Industrial Policy Might Shift Owing to Samsung’s Trillion-Won Gamble

Samsung’s 1,000 trillion won investment is about to reshape the nation’s industrial map.

Samsung just dropped a historic marker. The conglomerate plans 1,000 trillion won ($647 billion) investment over the next decade, a sum equivalent to nearly half of South Korea’s GDP.

This is a state-directed industrial policy that will help Samsung align itself with the government’s balanced growth agenda. The company will also funnel massive resources into AI data centers, secondary batteries, and advanced displays.

The timing reeks of urgency. South Korea fears losing its technological edge to the U.S. and China as the global race intensifies. Seoul actively pressures its national champions to build domestic capacity rather than offshoring, and this pledge serves as the definitive answer.

Critics might question the feasibility of such a colossal commitment, but the math favors the aggressive. Samsung’s projected profits for the next few years provide the necessary runway to sustain this decade-long push. Rival SK Hynix will likely join the effort, signaling a total shift in Korea’s industrial geography.

Investors clearly feel the strain of the ambition.

Shares of both companies slid 9% on Friday, reflecting the risks inherent in such massive capital expenditures. Samsung Chairman Lee Jae-yong, however, clearly prioritizes long-term dominance over short-term stock performance.

This announcement marks the moment South Korea’s corporate crown jewel effectively becomes the country’s primary engine for national economic expansion. If you look at the map of South Korea in 2036, you’ll see the footprint of this single decision.

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