(Bloomberg) -- South Korea will make artificial intelligence and wireless communications centerpieces of what it is touting as a ‘New Deal’ to create jobs and boost growth after the coronavirus pandemic subsides.

The government, in a statement Thursday, said it will promote AI and fifth-generation wireless technology to support the economy once the virus is brought under control. The statement didn’t say how much money would be spent, but that funding would come from a third emergency budget being drafted now and from annual budgets through 2022.

President Moon Jae-in, after last month’s big election victory, said his government would pursue large-scale state projects to boost jobs and innovation in the post-virus era. He compared his vision to the New Deal launched by President Franklin Roosevelt in the 1930s to help the U.S. recover from the Great Depression.

The project comes as South Korea’s trade-dependent economy braces for more fallout from the pandemic. Even though the country has so far managed to bring its own outbreak under control, March was its worst month for job losses since the global financial crisis, with part-time workers and young people among the hardest-hit.

As part of its New Deal, South Korea plans to create a fund to support AI development, build sites for robot testing and help businesses launch new services that make use of data, according to the statement. The government will also support construction of a nationwide 5G network, it said.

The goal is to enhance South Korea’s economic growth potential and create sustainable jobs for future generations, the government said, adding that more specifics will be announced in June.

“The New Deal is essentially an industrial growth strategy with jobs as a priority,” said economist Joseph Han at the Korea Development Institute. “It could be a stepping stone for young people struggling to get more than temporary, short-term employment.”

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