South Korea stocks gyrate as top aide floats AI ‘dividend’

South Korea is considering a 'Citizen Dividend' from AI profits. A top policymaker proposed using excess tax revenue to benefit all citizens. This move aims to share the AI boom's gains, potentially boosting social foundations and alleviating ineq...

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A top South Korean policymaker said the nation could pay citizens a “dividend” using excess tax revenue from AI profits, underscoring growing pressure to redistribute gains from a boom that’s enriched chipmakers like Samsung Electronics Co. and SK Hynix Inc.

The Facebook post late Monday by presidential policy chief Kim Yong-beom discussed how South Korea could use “excess tax revenue” generated by the AI boom. Early Tuesday, Korea stocks experienced sharp swings, in part as investors struggled to parse the scope of the proposals. The benchmark Kospi sank as much as 5.1%, then pared losses. An official at the president’s office told Bloomberg News that Kim’s remarks represented his personal opinion and weren’t the subject of formal discussions.

Shares in Samsung fell 2.3% and SK Hynix dropped 2.4%, while the Kospi closed down 2.3%.


The episode is the latest example of politicians calling attention to how the advent of AI risks widening the gap between the haves and have-nots. In South Korea, that concern has surfaced in public calls for industry leaders to share more of the spoils of the global AI infrastructure rollout. While Kim’s ideas are preliminary, if they were to be rolled out it would mark one of the first concerted government efforts to share the proceeds of the boom.

“The fruits of the AI infrastructure era are not the result of particular companies alone,” Kim wrote in the Facebook post, proposing that potentially “part of those fruits should be structurally returned to all citizens,” as what he provisionally called a “Citizen Dividend”.

After the sharp Kospi swings early Tuesday, Bloomberg News contacted Kim to ask whether he was suggesting rolling out a new windfall levy on corporate profits. “That is not what the post is suggesting,” he said by text message.
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Samsung is forecast to post 330 trillion won ($220 billion) in operating profit this year, which would likely push it past Apple Inc. and Alphabet Inc. to rank second only to Nvidia Corp. among the world’s most profitable companies. SK Hynix isn’t far behind, with a projected 239 trillion won of profit in 2026.

Asian economies want to provide a signal of ownership of the AI boom, Franklin Templeton Institute senior investment strategist Christy Tan told Bloomberg Television. “That concept is essentially redistributing the benefits of AI and advancements to citizens,” Tan said.

Kim’s 2,500 word post is a broad discussion of his thoughts on Korea’s evolving economy and the impact of artificial intelligence. His argument is that the government should begin to plan now for how the technology will affect corporate profits, jobs and society.

The country is in a “very special position,” he writes, because it has an integrated supply chain from memory chips, batteries, displays and more. It’s likely to receive billions of dollars in extra tax revenue as profits soar for companies like Samsung and SK Hynix.
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A designated dividend fund could then be allocated to build a stronger social foundation for Korea and alleviate inequalities for citizens. He points out there will be more startup opportunities because of AI so the money could be used for entrepreneurial support and youth education, as well as richer pensions for seniors or funding for artists.

“There is a rare historical possibility in front of Korea,” he writes. “It is the possibility of becoming the first nation not only to provide AI infrastructure but also to redistribute the excess profits of the AI era back into human lives.”
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While Kim told Bloomberg he wasn’t specifically describing a tax on excess corporate profits, the biggest beneficiaries globally of the AI boom will likely face pressure to share more of their gains. “What the Korea official is proposing right now is from excess tax, so tax residents then become quite wary about whether or not they could be the one footing the bill, instead of the government,” Tan said.

The size of any potential dividend, and other details on how Kim’s proposals might be implemented, weren’t immediately clear. Still, investors took notice.

In the time it usually takes to watch one soccer match, the Kospi index shed more than $300 billion in value. Its sudden reversal — and rebound — shows how jittery sentiment has become following a rally that lifted the benchmark index nearly 86% this year through Monday. While optimism remains strong — some Wall Street strategists project the Kospi at 10,000 — foreign investors withdrew 5.6 trillion won worth of Kospi shares on Tuesday, bringing their selling for the month to 14.4 trillion won.

“After some 80% gain this year, the market was getting sensitive to any news that can trigger investor jitters,” said Kim Dojoon, chief investment officer at Zian Investment Management. “Policy chief Kim’s post was easy to draw misunderstanding from the market at such a moment.”

Less than five months into the year, Korean stocks have already surpassed their world-beating rally of 2025. The gains were predominantly driven by Samsung and SK Hynix, whose shares have more than doubled this year.

If Samsung and SK Hynix meet estimates and post a combined profit of roughly 500 trillion won this year, for example, they could pay more than 100 trillion won in annual corporate taxes, according to Lim Jae-kyun, an analyst with KB Securities Co. That revenue could exceed the roughly 100 trillion won the government has estimated for the nation’s total 2026 corporate tax collection.

President Lee Jae Myung’s administration has emphasized “inclusive” growth, with policies aimed at boosting household income, regional development and support for small businesses and startups.

On Tuesday, Samsung and its labor union entered the final day of government-mediated wage negotiations in an effort to avert a strike that could disrupt operations at the world’s biggest memory chipmaker. Last month, tens of thousands of people gathered outside Samsung’s main chip hub to demand employees get a greater share of AI profits. The company’s labor union wants 15% of operating profit handed to chip-division employees.

The union has threatened an 18-day strike starting May 21. Workers have pointed to rising payouts at SK Hynix, which last year agreed to allocate 10% of its annual operating profit to a performance bonus pool, as evidence they deserve more pay.

“Excess profits in the AI era are, by nature, concentrated,” Kim wrote. Memory companies, core engineers and asset holders in Seoul are highly likely to receive substantial benefits, while much of the middle class may experience only indirect effects, he said.
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