Inter-Korean Projects to Cost Over $ 11 Bil.: Report

Korea Times
10/5/2007

More than $11 billion is needed to implement cross-border business projects that the leaders of the two Koreas agreed to at the historic summit this week, a local research institute estimated Friday.

Wrapping up a three-day summit, the second one since 2000, South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun and North Korean leader Kim Jong-il on Thursday agreed to a number of inter-Korean business projects.

According to Hyundai Research Institute, the development of a special economic zone in Haeju, the North’s western port city, will cost about $4.6 billion. Around $2.5 billion will be spent to finance the expansion of an industrial complex in the North Korean border city of Kaesong.

A project to build leisure facilities around Mount Baekdu is expected to cost $1.3 billion, the research institute said.

The estimated cost, when it is financed over five years, is equivalent to 8.75 percent of the North’s gross domestic income, and 0.25 percent of the South’s gross domestic product, Hyundai Research said.

The two leaders called for rapidly expanding the South-supported industrial park in the North’s border town of Kaesong and launching cross-border freight transportation via an inter-Korean railway between the South’s Munsan and the North’s Pongdong.

The two Koreas also agreed to jointly repair and maintain the North’s dilapidated expressway linking Kaesong and Pyongyang, as well as the North’s railway between Kaesong and Sinuiju on the North’s western Chinese border.

As part of a bilateral agreement to boost relations in tourism, history, language, education, culture, sport and art, the Koreas agreed to open a direct air route between Seoul and Mount Paekdu, allowing South Koreans to tour the scenic North Korean mountain on the North’s northern border with China.

The research institute, meanwhile, projected that the North would get $138 billion worth of economic benefits and the South $4.8 billion should the inter-Korean business projects be implemented as planned.

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