Battle for Semiconductor and AI Talent Intensifies: 360 Global Corporations Converge in Seoul
Desk
korocamia@naver.com | 2026-06-01 19:05:10
SEOUL — The landscape of the youth employment market is rapidly shifting its horizon toward multinational corporations and foreign-invested firms. Driven by an unprecedented surge in demand for highly skilled professionals in cutting-edge industries such as semiconductors and artificial intelligence (AI), the traditional domestically focused job market is experiencing a massive expansion into the global arena.
The "2026 Global Talent Fair (GTF)," the nation’s premier international recruitment exposition, officially commenced its two-day run on June 1 at COEX in southern Seoul. Jointly hosted by the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy and the Ministry of Employment and Labor, and organized by the Korea Trade-Investment Promotion Agency (KOTRA), the massive event underscores South Korea’s pivotal position in the global high-tech supply chain.
This year’s fair boasts a record-breaking participation of 360 enterprises, each aggressively vying to secure top-tier youth talent. The corporate roster includes 137 foreign-invested firms established in South Korea, 121 overseas-based global corporations, and 100 domestic companies specifically looking to hire international students. Notably, 26 Fortune 500 juggernauts—including Lam Research Korea, Bosch Korea, and Schneider Electric Korea—have set up dedicated recruitment booths to engage in direct on-site interviews.
A central pillar of the 2026 exposition is the dominant emergence of AI technology firms as the primary employment driver. Human resource executives from leading global AI corporations hosted a series of strategic briefing sessions, providing applicants with insider perspectives on the latest hiring trends and tailor-made strategies for breaking into the competitive AI workforce. In tandem with these sessions, the High-Tech Pavilion featured 86 specialized corporations representing critical future growth engines, including semiconductors, secondary batteries, next-generation vehicles, and artificial intelligence.
The event also highlighted a regional expansion of global career opportunities. Prominent multinational firms located outside the Seoul metropolitan area, such as Amkor Technology Korea and Aumobio Korea, actively participated in on-site hiring initiatives, offering diverse geographic career paths for ambitious job seekers.
Furthermore, institutional support for returning domestic talent was prominently featured. The Human Resources Development Service of Korea established specialized consulting booths targeting "U-turn talent"—young Koreans with professional experience abroad looking to reintegrate into the domestic or localized global workforce. These booths offered comprehensive employment consulting alongside detailed directories of corporations that provide preferential hiring points to returning expatriates and discharged military personnel.
In another notable development, Atlas Copco Group, a leading global industrial equipment conglomerate, consolidated its recruitment efforts by introducing a unified pavilion representing eight of its group companies simultaneously. Corporate veterans of the event, such as Atlas Copco Korea and CP Tools Korea, noted that their participation in last year’s fair yielded excellent results, successfully integrating two key professionals into their workforce through the GTF platform.
Emphasizing the strategic importance of the initiative, Kang Kyung-sung, President and CEO of KOTRA, stated, "This platform serves a dual purpose: it offers global enterprises an invaluable opportunity to secure the core talent necessary to lead future markets, while simultaneously providing our youth with access to premium, globally oriented careers. We remain fully committed to collaborating with all relevant ministries and institutions to ensure this platform yields maximum fruit for both sides."
As the tech race shows no signs of slowing down, the 2026 Global Talent Fair clearly demonstrates that the global talent war has reached a critical flashpoint, with South Korea’s bright minds positioned at the very center of it.
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