South Korea's three megaprojects target future, not polls: President Lee
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
South Korean President Lee Jae Myung on Saturday, 5 July 2025, pushed back against opposition claims that his government's sweeping regional investment drive is a political stunt, insisting the three 'megaprojects' are built around long-term national transformation — not approval ratings. The rebuttal came days after Seoul unveiled one of the most ambitious industrial blueprints in the country's recent history.
What the Megaprojects Entail
Announced earlier this week, the three megaprojects initiative centres on semiconductors, physical artificial intelligence (AI), and AI data centres, calling for a combined investment of 4,755 trillion won (approximately US$3.11 trillion). The scale of the programme positions it as a generational bet on South Korea's technological competitiveness.
As part of the scheme, Samsung announced plans to build two memory chip fabrication plants in the southwestern city of Gwangju. Meanwhile, SK Hynix said it will construct two fabs in the surrounding Jeolla provinces, with the combined Samsung-SK Hynix semiconductor commitment reportedly valued at 800 trillion won.
What President Lee Said
Addressing the opposition directly in a post on X, Lee argued that the timing of the announcement itself refutes the political motive charge. 'If the projects had been intended to manage approval ratings, they would have been launched ahead of the June 3 local elections,' he wrote, adding that a national transformation plan of this kind was something he had long envisioned even before taking office.
Lee further stated that what matters more than approval ratings are 'tangible results that improve people's lives,' and pledged to make 'all-out efforts to give hope, dreams and vitality to young people.'
Opposition Pushback
The main opposition People Power Party (PPP) has alleged that political considerations are driving the initiative, framing the regional investment focus as an attempt to shore up support rather than address structural economic priorities. The government has rejected those characterisations outright.
Next Steps: Strategic Review Meeting
President Lee is set to preside over a high-level joint public-private meeting at the presidential office next Monday to review progress on the mega semiconductor production cluster in the southwestern region. According to presidential spokesperson Kang Yoo-jung, the session will mark the first formal strategic review since the investment plans were made public.
Lee has pledged to personally oversee the projects, underscoring the urgency of accelerating implementation. How swiftly the government can move from announcement to ground-level execution will likely determine whether the megaprojects deliver on their transformative promise.