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View Full Version : DPRK: Market-introduction?



Jose Gracchus
19th June 2010, 09:00
ht tp://ww w.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/06/18/AR2010061802837.html


By Chico Harlan
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, June 18, 2010; 4:27 PM

SEOUL -- Bowing to reality, the North Korean government has lifted all restrictions on private markets -- a last-resort option for a leadership desperate to prevent its people from starving.

In recent weeks, according to North Korea observers and defector groups with sources in the country, Kim Jong Il's government admitted its inability to solve the current food shortage and encouraged its people to rely on private markets for the purchase of goods. Though the policy reversal will not alter daily patterns -- North Koreans have depended on such markets for more than 15 years -- the latest order from Pyongyang abandons a key pillar of a central, planned economy.

With November's currency revaluation, Kim wiped out his citizens' personal savings and struck a blow against the private food distribution system sustaining his country. The latest policy switch, though, stands as an acknowledgment that the currency move was a failure and that only capitalist-style trading can prevent widespread famine.

"The North Korean government has tried all possible ways [for a planned economy] and failed, and it now has to resort to the last option," said Koh Yu-hwan, professor of North Korean studies at Dongguk University in Seoul. "There's been lots of back and forth in what the government has been willing to tolerate, and I cannot rule out the possibility of them trying to bring back restrictions on the markets. But it is hard for the government to reverse it now."

Because North Korea operates in secrecy and isolation, outside observers rely on informants and accounts from defectors. In this case, experts agree that the food shortage is dire. Several analysts who monitor and travel to North Korea said that in recent weeks, Pyongyang has abandoned almost all its rules about who can spend money and when. That would seem to indicate that Kim -- who once equated free-market trading with "egotism" and a collapse of social order -- now wants to rehabilitate the markets damaged in November.

As of May 26, the government no longer forces markets to close at 6 or 7 p.m., has dropped the rule restricting customers to women older than 40 and has lifted a ban on certain goods being sold. An official in the city of Pyungsung informed the Good Friends humanitarian group that the living standard had "drastically decreased since the currency exchange, and the government cannot provide distribution so they have to bring the market back up."

The Good Friends newsletter quoted the official as saying: "There are increasing deaths from starvation so opening [the] market is a reasonable resolution. Death due to starvation has gone out of control."

In the mid-1990s, amid a total collapse of the central planned economy, somewhere between 3 and 5 percent of the population -- perhaps 1 million people -- died of starvation. Meanwhile, North Koreans increasingly turned to small markets for trading and buying supplies.

In part because of that, the hermit nation now maintains a stronger line of defense against starvation -- one that did not exist during the famine.

Compared with the peak of the food crisis, in the mid and late '90s, "the actual amount of food -- less is available now," said Kim Heung-gwang, a North Korean defector and president of a group called North Korea Intellectuals Solidarity. "But back then, the food circulation industry wasn't as built up. Even though the absolute amount of food is less now than it was 15 years ago, I think the starvation problem will be less significant."

In 1994, Kim said, people "didn't know how to survive because they were looking for rations."

North Korea analysts say that the Nov. 30, 2009, currency reform caused nearly as much trauma as the famine 15 years earlier. The government turned 100 won into 1, and North Koreans responded with minor protests.

In recent months, North Korea's chronic food problems have probably worsened. When South Korea's government concluded in late May that the North was responsible for sinking one of the South's warships, killing 46 people, international outrage caused food aid to slow. The South announced that it would cut all trade with its neighbor, though the North has denied any responsibility. China remains North Korea's primary benefactor, but little is known about how much food China supplies. According to analysts, Pyongyang's latest reaction could suggest it is struggling to secure the necessary aid from China.

Staff writer Blaine Harden and special correspondent Yoonjung Seo contributed to this report.Posted without commment. I'm not a DPRKspert, so I will leave the better informed to respond and illuminate.

Proletarian Ultra
19th June 2010, 10:25
It's 'funny' how North Korea's economic problems are always blamed on internal policies, never on external sanctions. This is precisely the opposite of how the West spoke of Iraq; Maddy Albright and other lumpen-genocidaires were practically shouting from the rooftops that they were responsible for all the dead Iraqi babies.

In this case, for once, the problem is partly of the DPRK's own making: devaluing the currency was a conscious policy.

The currency revaluation was probably an attempt to boost exports. (If a currency is weak, it becomes more attractive for foreigners to buy goods produced in that currency zone; this is why the US is constantly running a trade deficit due to the strong dollar policy). The Western press is always prone to label anything the DPRK does as a failure. To me it looks like the currency move and opening up markets are part of a single policy.

But to the extent the devaluation 'failed', it would be due to trade restrictions placed on the DPRK after the ship sinking incident. Take a big hit to increase exports, and then no one will take them. Adds another layer of tinfoil to the Cheonan hat.

Muzk
19th June 2010, 10:29
How could NK fix its problems?

Unproductive soldiers and government officials into production.

Wanted Man
19th June 2010, 10:40
How could NK fix its problems?

Unproductive soldiers and government officials into production.

They've been doing that for years.

Proletarian Ultra
19th June 2010, 11:22
And by the way these are markets (actual places where you can buy and sell goods). Not, you know, like stock exchanges and collateralized debt obligations and junk.

Glenn Beck
19th June 2010, 11:34
Adds another layer of tinfoil to the Cheonan hat.

My thoughts, exactly