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Updated May 31, 2026 · 09:35
Technology News Updated May 31, 2026

Science Minister Pledges Support for South Korea as 'Full-Stack' AI Provider

Science Minister Bae Kyung-hoon vowed to support South Korea's AI sector to become a full-stack technology provider. The government is selecting developers for homegrown AI foundation models, with four teams advancing. Bae noted South Korea is the third-largest AI power but investment lags behind other countries. He proposed establishing equal AI access to address wealth concentration and job displacement.

Science minister vows support to foster S. Korea as 'full-stack' AI provider

Seoul, May 31

Science Minister Bae Kyung-hoon vowed to double down on efforts to support the local artificial intelligence sector so that South Korea can become a "full stack" supplier of the technology.

Bae made the remarks at a press conference held Friday, saying South Korea should now take on the challenge of developing a frontier AI model, on par with competitors from the United States and China, reports Yonhap news agency.

The minister's comments come as government-led efforts to select developers for South Korea's homegrown AI foundation models are currently in progress.

Four teams, LG AI Research, SK Telecom Co., as well as startups Upstage and Motif Technologies Inc., made it through the first round with the second-round of survivors expected to be announced in early August.

Bae said the country has "improved a lot" in terms of AI-related technical prowess, noting that South Korea was recognised as the third-largest AI power last year by Stanford University's AI Index.

But the level of investments, particularly in AI-related infrastructure, still fall short of those from other countries, he argued.

"I think the government budget earmarked for AI is only close to the amount of investments from one U.S. big tech company," Bae said.

As part of efforts to construct AI infrastructure, the ministry is working to build more data centres utilising graphic processing units (GPUs), including more than 260,000 GPU units it secured from NVIDIA Corp. last year.

The science ministry is also focused on using neural processing units (NPUs), a type of advanced chip used in AI machine learning, produced by local companies, he said.

When asked about his opinion on how to redistribute windfall profits generated by the recent AI boom, Bae said it is important to create equitable access to AI models, saying that a reduction in jobs and concentration of wealth are inevitable problems in the AI era.

There have been debates within the government on how to utilise the tax surpluses and corporate profits from the country's major chipmakers amid the AI boom, with a presidential official once coming under the spotlight for proposing public redistribution in the form of "citizen dividends."

"One of the ways to address this issue is to establish a system where every person has access to and can utilise at least one AI agent ... allowing everyone to participate in economic activities through AI and ensuring equal opportunities for all," Bae said.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Sneha F

Interesting that they talk about equal access to AI agents. In India, we have so many people who don't even have proper internet or power supply. First world problems vs third world realities I guess.

Michael C

The minister's point about redistribution is valid. If companies automate jobs with AI, unemployment will rise. But if they just give everyone an AI agent, won't that mean fewer human jobs overall? Chicken and egg problem.

Priyanka N

260,000 GPUs from NVIDIA! That's a massive investment. Meanwhile in India, we're still debating whether to import chips or make our own. The competition in AI is moving at lightning speed.

Deepak U

One US big tech company investing more than entire government AI budget? That tells you how much money is in this field. India needs to partner with private companies more aggressively if we want to compete.

Jennifer L

"Third largest AI power" per Stanford - that's impressive for a country of 50 million. Shows what focused government policy can achieve. India could learn from their approach, especially the NPU development by local companies.

Ravi K

Citizen dividends from AI profits? Unlikely to happen here politically. But the idea of giving everyone access to one AI agent is interesting - like a universal basic income of intelligence. Could work in places like rural India where

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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