Archive for March 12th, 2008

(Update) Lee Jong-seok slams Bank of Korea (and CIA) estimates of North Korean economy

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

UPDATE 2: On March 6, 2008 the CIA World Fact Book on North Korea was updated. Yonhap reports that the CIA’s estimate of North Korean GDP in 2007 (adjusted for PPP) is unchanged from 2006 at $40 billion and that per-capital GDP has increased from $1,800 to $1,900.  But the story also reports that the CIA has estimated an increase in North Korea’s population–23,301,725 in 2007, up from 23,113,019 in 2006.

So my quesiton is this…

If GDP is unchanged, how do you increase per capita GDP without reducing the population numbers?

On a side note…one of my former economics professors used to say, “Stalin increased per capita GDP in the Soviet Union by reducing the denominator.”

Update 1: From Dr. Petrov:
Per-capita GNI at $368 to $389 seems to be right [from the revised estimate below]. It’s approximately 1/3 of the Soviet figure by the time it collapsed (around $1000 per-capita). These days North Koreans still live poorer than people in the USSR.

Original Post: Yonhap reports that Lee Jong-suk, former Minister of Unification and senior fellow at the Sejong Institute, claims that the South Korean Bank of Korea has radically overestimated North Korea’s Gross National Income and military spending.

In August, the Bank of Korea (BOK) announced that North Korea’s nominal gross national income (GNI) amounted to US$25.6 billion in 2005, about 35 times smaller than South Korea’s. GNI refers to a nation’s gross domestic product plus its trade loss or gain arising from changes in trade. The bank also estimated North Korea’s per-capita GNI at $1,108 that year, about 17 times smaller than that of its rival South Korea.

The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency’s (CIA’s) latest estimate of North Korea’s nominal GNI is $40 billion.

“If the BOK statistics are true, North Korea’s per-capita GNI represents two thirds of China’s $1,736, and nearly double Vietnam’s $616,” Lee said in a monthly magazine published Friday by the institute in the southern suburbs of Seoul. “Nobody would believe it if someone said North Korea is two times wealthier than Vietnam that is close to resolving its food problems,” Lee said.

The bank used a “wrong method” of employing South Korea’s price and value-added rate information in calculating North Korea’s GNI, the expert said. One dollar is about 150 North Korean won and about 950 South Korean won.

Lee said he commissioned financial experts to calculate North Korea’s GNI using “a method generally used by countries over the world” while in office. “North Korea’s GNI came to $8.4 to 8.9 billion with a per-capita GNI at $368 to $389 based on the 2005 foreign currency market rate,” he said, adding the estimates better reflect North Korea’s economic reality.

North Korea’s defense spending would be around $2.1 to $2.6 billion, not $5 billion, when the same calculation method is used, he said.

Read all of the stories here:
N. Korea’s GDP estimated at $40 billion: CIA
Yonhap
3/12/2008 

N. Korean economy overestimated says expert
Yonhap
3/8/2007

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DPRK-Oracsom mobile phone deal update

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

From Reuters

[Naguib Sawiris, CEO] said he was “astonished” how quickly the North Korean authorities wanted the service to start and he had high hopes for business in the country.

“We firmly believe that in the next three or four years we will be having a couple of million subscribers there and we will be seeing ARPUs in the range of $12 or $15 (a month),” he added.

Sawiris said that of the $400 million the company plans to invest in North Korea over the next three years, about $200 million would probably come in the first year, with $100 million in each of the two subsequent years.

Read the full story here:
Egypt’s OT seeks 100,000 N Korean subscribers from May
Reuters
3/12/2008

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6,000 North Korean children receive vaccines…

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

…against Japanese encephalitis, meningitis

The one-day campaign on Feb. 29 was a pilot project to study the feasibility of introducing both vaccines to the north’s routine inoculation program, the Seoul-based International Vaccine Institute said in a statement.

Some 3,000 children in Sariwon, south of Pyongyang, received the encephalitis vaccine, while the others in the city of Nampo, southwest of the capital, were administered with a vaccine against Haemophilus influenza type B – a bacteria that causes meningitis, it said.

Read the full story here:
6,000 North Korean children receive vaccines against Japanese encephalitis, meningitis
Associated Press
3/12/2008

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