Un incremento en las exportaciones de semiconductores de Corea del Sur y el potencial de crecimiento con IA

Generado por agente de IAAdrian HoffnerRevisado porAInvest News Editorial Team
jueves, 1 de enero de 2026, 8:04 am ET2 min de lectura

South Korea's semiconductor industry has emerged as a linchpin of its economic resilience, with exports surging to record levels in 2025. After a 22.6% decline in 2023 due to falling memory chip prices, the sector rebounded with a

in 2024, fueled by recovering demand for memory semiconductors. By 2025, semiconductor exports hit $173.4 billion-a 22.2% jump from 2024- and rising memory chip prices. This trajectory underscores South Korea's strategic positioning in the global semiconductor value chain and its ability to adapt to cyclical market shifts.

Government-Backed Innovation: A $518 Billion Bet on AI and Semiconductors

The South Korean government has

through a 700 trillion won ($518 billion) plan to secure global dominance. This includes KRW 24.8 trillion allocated to R&D in 2025, with for AI semiconductor development. The strategy focuses on next-generation memory, AI processors, and advanced packaging technologies, while also addressing vulnerabilities such as overreliance on Chinese raw materials.

A cornerstone of this effort is the National Growth Fund, a KRW 100 trillion ($72 billion) initiative designed to de-risk private investment in high-tech sectors.

, the fund aims to catalyze private capital for AI semiconductors, quantum computing, and on-device AI chips. Additionally, the Ministry of Science and ICT has and low-power AI chip design for autonomous vehicles as national strategic technologies, offering preferential financing to firms like Samsung and SK Hynix.

Corporate Giants: Samsung, SK Hynix, and the AI Infrastructure Play

Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix are leading the charge in AI-driven semiconductor innovation. Both companies

, a global AI infrastructure platform, to scale production of advanced memory chips and expand data center capacity in South Korea. Samsung and SK Hynix aim to produce 900,000 DRAM wafer starts monthly to meet demand for OpenAI's AI models, while and API tools into their operations.

These partnerships align with broader U.S.-led efforts to strengthen global AI supply chains.

to expanding U.S. semiconductor manufacturing, emphasizing collaboration with trusted allies to scale AI technologies. SK Hynix, meanwhile, is to enhance technical competitiveness across the AI stack.

Startups and the AI Semiconductor Ecosystem

South Korea's startup ecosystem is gaining momentum,

venture investment influx in Q3 2025. Firms like Rebellions and FuriosaAI-specializing in AI-specific chips-secured significant Series C funding, signaling strong investor confidence. The government's collaboration with NVIDIA and domestic giants like Samsung and Hyundai Motor Group is further accelerating AI infrastructure development, with at the National AI Computing Center by 2027.

The Ministry of SMEs and Startups has also

to nurture 50 AI unicorn startups by 2030. These efforts are bolstered by the M.AX Alliance, a 1,300-member initiative for vehicles, robots, and home electronics, with commercial products slated for 2030.

Strategic Investment Opportunities

For investors, South Korea's semiconductor and AI boom presents three key opportunities:
1. Established Players: Samsung and SK Hynix are well-positioned to benefit from AI-driven demand for memory chips and advanced packaging. Their partnerships with OpenAI and U.S. allies ensure long-term growth.
2. Government-Backed Startups: AI semiconductor startups receiving venture capital and public funding (e.g., Rebellions, FuriosaAI) offer high-growth potential, particularly in niche areas like on-device AI and quantum computing.
3. Infrastructure Providers: Firms involved in AI data centers, GPU deployment, and cloud-based resource-sharing technologies (e.g., SK Telecom, Samsung C&T) stand to gain from South Korea's

.

Conclusion: A Nation on the AI Fast Track

South Korea's semiconductor and AI strategy is a masterclass in industrial policy, combining aggressive R&D spending, strategic corporate partnerships, and startup ecosystem support. With exports projected to remain robust and AI adoption accelerating globally, the country is

by 2030. For investors, this represents a rare convergence of macroeconomic tailwinds, technological leadership, and government-driven momentum.

author avatar
Adrian Hoffner

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