The growing
tension in Korea, where North Korea keeps threatening war, has a large
number of people in the consumer electronics business worried. If there
were a war that lasted long enough and did enough damage to disrupt
production of the many electronics components South Korea supplies,
there would be a lot fewer cell phones, PCs (desktop, laptop and tablet)
and flat screen displays (for PCs or TVs) available worldwide. We’re
talking major shortages. South Korean firms are the largest producers of
smart phones (Samsung) and flat screen everything (Samsung and several
others).
The South Korean military understands the importance of
protecting its economic assents in general and the high-value electronic
industry in particular. The South Korean war plan, while classified, is
known to take account of the need to defend these assets. This is
crucial because some of the electronics component manufacturing plants
would take several years to rebuild, and put thousands of highly skilled
people out of work in the process and cause South Korean firms to lose
customers and future sales to competitors.
The disruptive impact of such losses is not theoretical, it
has already happened. In the last decade floods in Thailand and
earthquakes in Japan have disrupted supplies of key electronics. This
caused shortages and sharply increasing prices. The floods in Thailand
two years ago disrupted the supply, and prices for hard drives
worldwide, because Thailand is where many of the largest plants are
located. South Korea is even more critical because many electronics
items are not just assembled there, but key components are designed and
manufactured as well. Some of that work requires highly complex and
expensive factories to get it all done. If there were extensive damage
to these plants there would be shortages of many popular electronics
items, prices would double (or worse) for what is available and it would
take more than a year for the situation to be rectified.
It’s not just civilian consumers that would feel the pinch,
but the military as well. Many key military electronics items are built
from South Korean components. The exact impact of that is not talked
about openly by the military, but apparently the impact would be very
serious, especially for the production of expendable items (like
missiles).
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