this post was submitted on 09 Sep 2025
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After the mass arrest and detention of 300 Korean workers over visa issues while building an advanced manufacturing plant in the U.S., Korean companies that had announced large-scale investments in America are now acutely aware of the risks in the U.S. market.

Earlier this year, Korean firms rushed to announce U.S. investments in an effort to avoid the “tariff bomb” triggered by President Trump. Ahead of the Korea-U.S. summit, the Korean government assembled a massive investment package, prompting even companies that had already committed to invest to unveil additional plans - bringing the total to $150 billion (approximately 209 trillion won). One executive from a major conglomerate remarked, “Given the circumstances, we’ve ended up investing more than we actually needed, almost as if we were pushed into it.”

In this climate, the Trump administration’s policies - such as cutting subsidies and tightening immigration enforcement, which stand in stark contrast to the previous Biden administration - are fueling concerns among Korean businesses. Some are even saying, “If the market is this unpredictable, it might be better to reconsider our investments and just pay the tariffs.

Korean companies have long been reluctant to build manufacturing facilities in the United States. Labor costs are significantly higher than in Korea, yet skilled workers are hard to find. A semiconductor industry insider noted, “Many plants are being built in rural areas of the U.S. where income levels are low, and most local workers have never seen a semiconductor cleanroom - let alone participated in constructing a large-scale facility.” He added, “Despite the high labor costs, companies have to train these workers, build advanced facilities on schedule, and partner with nearby universities to ensure a steady talent pipeline - essentially creating an entirely new ecosystem from scratch.”

According to a 2021 report by the Semiconductor Industry Association, the total cost of operating an advanced system semiconductor plant in the U.S. for 10 years is 28% higher than in Korea. If the cost in the U.S. is indexed at 100, Korea, Taiwan, and Japan come in at 78, while China is at 63. In other words, the U.S. is not a cost-efficient location for owning and operating semiconductor plants. The burden from labor cost disparities outweighs even the impact of reciprocal tariffs (15%) and automotive tariffs (25%, though a 15% rate was agreed upon but not implemented) currently applied to Korean exports.

All costs are paid in U.S. dollars, and with both exchange rates and inflation rising, the surge in labor and raw material expenses has become a major burden. According to a 2023 Reuters report, the cost of building Samsung Electronics’ semiconductor plant in Taylor, Texas is expected to exceed $25 billion - 47% higher than the original estimate of $17 billion (₩34.75 trillion). That’s more than ₩11 trillion in additional spending. Reuters cited a local source saying that roughly 80% of the cost increase was due to rising material prices.

Cost inflation continues to climb. The Trump administration has maintained high tariff policies, including a 50% import duty on steel. These measures have contributed to inflation, further driving up the cost of establishing manufacturing facilities in the U.S.

The biggest issue is uncertainty - something once unimaginable in the United States, a model of free-market capitalism. The previous Biden administration offered large-scale subsidies to offset the notoriously high costs of operating in the U.S. and to attract manufacturing investment. But that promise has been completely reversed. In 2025, the Trump administration not only moved to reduce or eliminate subsidies, but even floated the unprecedented idea of acquiring equity stakes in investing companies.

Immigration enforcement has followed a similar reversal. In 2021, the Biden administration announced a halt to large-scale workplace raids targeting undocumented workers - a move closely tied to its investment promotion strategy. Georgia, home to Hyundai’s plant and several Korean battery firms, benefited significantly. In contrast, Trump’s second term has tightened visa issuance and reversed immigration policies, placing greater pressure on foreign investors. This shift culminated in a high-profile raid on the Hyundai-LG plant, which was widely reported by global media.

*A representative from a Korean company remarked, “What businesses fear more than losses is uncertainty. The unpredictability of the U.S. market makes it nearly impossible for companies to commit to long-term investment plans.”

tl;dr: America is fuck, do not invest.

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[–] micnd90@hexbear.net 16 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (1 children)

The current tariffs were made purely from executive decision, as such, it can easily be rolled back via court challenges or policy reversal by the next administration, or even current administration after a bad midterm election defeat. The current tariff policy is as prescient as Michelle Obama's "eat your veggies" campaign. Both are purely executive mandates.

Why would capital bother to invest in building factories, which is at least a 20, 30, 40 years commitment under these uncertainties. Just invest in bonds and wait it out lmao. Indeed American manufacturing is even more fucked than before.

[–] D61@hexbear.net 7 points 1 week ago

Why would capital bother to invest in building factories...

People are people. A long term view of things would just have all foreign investment in USA business projects halted until after the Trump administration and probably paused until after the next administration took over to see what the environment actually looks like.

But the Trump administration is a bit... consistently inconsistent. So, you've got business interests that would like to keep their numbers going up but the current environment is too unpredictable so business decisions are being made on a more reactionary short term gain level.

Example: Trump's constantly turning the tariff spigot on and off. Trump spent a lot of time talking publicly about increasing manufacturing capacity in the USA. Foreign businesses might take a gamble with a plan of, "Build our factory in the USA, this will give our interests special treatment when it comes to blanket tariffs." Those same business interests now have 9 months watching Trump invoke/revoke/threaten tariffs on a whim and can make a more defensive business decision of just abandoning their USA projects because nothing they do will keep Trump happy for long. Better to get out now with only minimal immediate losses instead of losing everything later.

[–] TheBroodian@hexbear.net 13 points 1 week ago
[–] PosadistInevitablity@hexbear.net 13 points 1 week ago (1 children)

No one is going to plan based on tariffs that can change from minute to minute.

The whole scheme is absolutely hairbrained.

[–] WafflesTasteGood@hexbear.net 8 points 1 week ago

Not to mention, the investment itself will often get hit with tariffs since the most equipment and materials come from everywhere else.

[–] queermunist@lemmy.ml 9 points 1 week ago

Yeah, and you might invest in a parts manufacturing plant in Georgia, get raided by ICE, and 500 workers get deported.

[–] HexReplyBot@hexbear.net 2 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

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