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'Half-baked' chips act falls short of drastic corporate tax cuts

Samsung, SK hynix to enjoy 8% tax break on home soil, compared to 25% offered by US

By Jo He-rim

Published : Dec. 25, 2022 - 15:28

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National Assembly holds a plenary session late on Friday. (Yonhap) National Assembly holds a plenary session late on Friday. (Yonhap)

South Korea last week passed a revision bill being deemed the "Korean chips act," expanding tax benefits for investments in the semiconductors industry.

But the bill has done little to appease stakeholders in the industry, who said the increased tax cuts are too little to boost their competitiveness against other countries that have adopted their own chips laws.

The National Assembly on Friday passed the revision bill to the Restriction of Special Taxation Act, which raised the corporate tax break for facility investment to 8 percent for large corporations such as Samsung Electronics and SK hynix, from the previous 6 percent.

Tax breaks for medium-sized enterprises and companies that are classified as small or midsized remain unchanged, at 8 percent and 16 percent, respectively.

Among the 262 lawmakers present, 225 voted to approve the revision, while 12 opposed and 25 abstained.

Industry watchers say the tax cut for large corporations remains far less than the double-digit tax breaks being offered in other countries.

When President Yoon Suk-yeol came into office in May, he pledged 20 percent tax breaks, highlighting the importance of fostering the semiconductors industry.

The ruling People Power Party had first proposed the revision bill, which included raising the tax discount from 6 percent for large corporations to 20 percent. For medium-sized firms, the party sought to raise the rate from 8 percent to 25 percent, along with going to 30 percent for small and midsized companies.

But the proposed rate was adjusted down to 10 percent, after the main opposition Democratic Party of Korea criticized the high tax cuts as unfairly subsidizing the rich. The rate was lowered once more when the Ministry of Economy and Finance raised concerns of reduced government revenue.

Other countries leading in the semiconductor market, such as the United States and Taiwan, have introduced laws to support domestic chip production.

The United States passed its CHIPS and Science Act in July this year in a bid to bring chip technology, manufacturing and innovation to the country.

The US act provides $52.7 billion to encourage research and boost the domestic chip supply, and also offers a 25 percent investment tax credit for capital expenses of semiconductor manufacturing and related equipment.

In the case of Taiwan, which is home to the world's top foundry operator TSMC, talks are underway to raise tax breaks from the current 15 percent to 25 percent.

Rep. Yang Hyang-ja, who chairs the special parliamentary committee of the ruling People Power Party, strongly criticized the revision bill as “half-baked.”

“The global standard for semiconductor investment is 25 percent, the US is at 25 percent, Taiwan is at 25 percent and for China, it is 100 percent. South Korea sets it at 8 percent. How would that foster competitiveness?” Rep. Yang posed. The Samsung Electronics executive-turned-lawmaker switched to a political independent upon her exit from the main opposition Democratic Party last year.

“The amount of money that leaked out to the US amounts to some 300 trillion won ($234 billion). The size of the ‘Korea exodus’ will grow bigger.”

The Federation of Korean Industries also expressed strong disappointment at the single-digit discount on corporate taxes, saying the government's full-fledged support is key to boosting the competitive edge for the chips industry.

"(The government) needs to understand that in a long-term point of view, that raising the corporate tax break for facility investment can support South Korea to gain leadership in future industries, which would lead to an increase in tax revenue," the FKI said in a statement.

"It is worrisome to see the National Assembly and the government are only focusing on the short-term decrease of tax revenue."

By Jo He-rim (herim@heraldcorp.com)