Samsung developing robots to replace cheap Chinese labour

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The South Korean government has handed Samsung a multi-million dollar investment to develop factory robots that can carry out complex tasks normally reserved for nimble human fingers.

The country's Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy said the $16.75 billion won ($14.8m, £9.57m) investment would help manufacturers compete with cheap labour in China.

According to the Yonha News Agency, Samsung will be tasked with developing high-precision robots that are currently expensive and often imported from abroad. The ministry expects work to be completed by late 2018.

Samsung will build precision speed reducers, motors, controllers and sensor encoders. The plan, the ministry said, was for South Korean robots to pick up work normally done by low-wage Chinese workers.

The robots will eventually be put to work making products such as mobile phones and other consumer electronics that require the level of precision often only possible with human hands.

Samsung, as with many other large smartphone manufacturers, relies heavily on cheap Chinese labour to manufacture its products. But rising wages in China are squeezing profit margins, making the development of more automated factories a priority. "Once affordable robots reach the market and are more widely used, it can lead to the creation of 'smart factories' and bring about far-reaching innovations to the manufacturing sector," the ministry said in a statement.

If Samsung's project is a success, the company will provide the blueprint for mass-produced, six-axis vertical articulated robots. This will mean companies in South Korea and elsewhere will be less reliant on cheap labour to make products, the ministry claimed.

The global industrial robotics business was worth $10.7bn (£6.9bn) in 2014, according to the International Federation of Robotics. China was the largest market, shipping over 57,000 industrial robots, with Japan in second, followed by the United States and South Korea.

The use of robots currently accounts for around 10 percent of the manufacturing process, but that figure is expected to rise to 20 percent by 2025.

This article was originally published by WIRED UK