Archive for February, 2010

North Korea’s regime stumbles

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

The Economist
2/10/2010

However loathsome his neighbours find Kim Jong Il, the nuclear-armed North Korean dictator, there are few who do not also admit that beneath the big hair lurks a tactical genius with a flair for survival. At home, North Koreans are smothered by his ruthless personality cult. With the outside world, he is an adept blackmailer: act mad enough to be dangerous; then be conciliatory in exchange for cash.

Recently, however, on both counts he has made tactical mistakes. None of these are serious enough to endanger his regime, diplomats say. But they are encouraging to those who believe they can eventually push North Korea back to talks about dismantling its nuclear arsenal. And they reaffirm the benefits of what the Americans call “strategic patience”: waiting until North Korea is desperate enough to offer concessions.

Even the regime appears, in its oddball way, to have acknowledged the most recent blunder. News reports this month suggest that North Korea has reversed some elements of a crackdown on private enterprise that it unleashed with a cack-handed redenomination of the won on November 30th.

In the interim, the currency collapsed, the price of rice surged by as much as 50 times, and much of traders’ working capital for buying and selling goods was wiped out. Amid a seizing up of food distribution, there were some rare grumbles of protest.

But since early February, regulations on trading in the jangmadang, or markets, across North Korea appear to have been lifted, according to news reports. Official prices (which are not necessarily what are paid) have been posted. A kilo of rice costs 240 won ($1.80) (a bit less than a pair of socks), a toothbrush is 25 won.

Meanwhile, the Dear Leader has made what some observers believe to be an unprecedented apology to his people for feeding them “broken rice” and not providing enough white rice, bread and noodles. He was, he said, “heartbroken”, and implicitly acknowledged he had violated an oath to his godlike father, Kim Il Sung, to feed the people rice and meat soup.

Adding to the poignancy, experts say the bungled reforms were done in the name of Kim Jong Un, the dictator’s third son and potential heir. The young man’s involvement may have been part of a strategy to reassert Stalinist-style state control of the enfeebled economy ahead of 2012, the 100th anniversary of grandfather Kim’s birth.

People knowledgeable on North Korea are loth to believe that such a plan has been abandoned, not least because the small markets that have flourished since the famine of the 1990s represent such a challenge to the state’s authority. But they say the ineptitude must have been glaringly obvious, even in the hermetic state.

“The government has never said sorry to the people, especially on a topic as sensitive as rice,” says Andrei Lankov of Kookmin University in Seoul, who has written a lot on North Korea and has described its leaders as brilliant Machiavellians. “Because of Kim Jong Il’s age and the age of those around him, it looks like he may be losing touch with reality.”

Mr Lankov believes there may have been a similar miscalculation in North Korea’s recent behaviour towards America, China, South Korea, Japan and Russia, the countries with whom in 2003 it started on-again, off-again denuclearisation negotiations, known as the six-party talks. Its firing of a long-range missile and explosion of a nuclear bomb in quick succession last year hardened the resolve of the five to strengthen United Nations sanctions against Pyongyang and maintain them until it gives ground on its nukes. However much Mr Kim has cajoled and coaxed in the months since, he has not yet managed to divide them.

What’s more, diplomats say he appears to be increasingly open to discussing a return to the six-party talks, something which last year he vowed “never” to do. China, which is closest to North Korea and chairs the six-party forum, sent Wang Jiarui, a senior Communist Party official, to meet Mr Kim this week and invite him to Beijing. Mr Kim made no public commitment regarding the six-party talks. But his nuclear negotiator returned with Mr Wang to the Chinese capital.

Lee Myung-bak, South Korea’s president, surprised his countrymen by saying that he, too, hoped to meet Mr Kim “within this year”. The timing was odd. His statement came at about the time North Korea was lobbing artillery shells threateningly into the Yellow Sea. But it revealed what officials say is a twin-track process in Seoul to engage North Korea: bilaterally and via the six-party framework. “My impression is that the North Koreans are moving in the direction of talks,” says Wi Sung-lac, South Korea’s special representative for peace on the peninsula.

Both North Korea and its six-party counterparts have set such tough conditions on coming together that it would be foolhardy to be optimistic. North Korea wants a lifting of the UN sanctions and a peace treaty with America to out a formal end to the 1950-53 Korean War before restarting talks. Washington has resisted both. An East Asian diplomat said the other five countries are demanding that North Korea take “concrete measures” towards denuclearisation as a pre-condition for talks and the lifting of sanctions. “We’re not giving any carrots.”

Underscoring the resolve, humanitarian assistance to North Korea has slowed to a trickle. South Korea sent only $37m of public aid north last year, compared with $209m in 2007. Officials say Mr Lee is adamant no money will go to North Korea to coax it into agreeing to a summit. Talks on cross-border tourism and factories, another means for Pyongyang to extort hard currency from the south, have made no progress.

Mr Kim still has some good cards up his sleeve. Tensions between China and America over Taiwan and Tibet provide a thread of disharmony that he can tug upon. And China has a strategic eye on North Korea’s ports and minerals, which may encourage it to be overly generous to the regime.

But the mere hint of economic and diplomatic fallibility in a regime that demands almost religious devotion from its subjects may be significant. It comes at a time when North Koreans, via smuggled DVDs and telephones, have a greater idea than ever before of how far their living conditions fall short of their neighbours’. That is a rare point of vulnerability for Mr Kim’s interlocutors to exploit.

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DPRK ships (2)* Vs. Somali Pirates (2)

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

(* = assist from the US Navy)

According to UPI:

Pirates seized a North Korean-flagged cargo ship owned by Libya’s White Sea Shipping in the Gulf of Aden off Somalia and Yemen, an anti-piracy task force said.

The 4,800-ton MV Rim changed course and was headed for the Somali Basin Wednesday, the European Union Naval Force said, CNN reported. The task force said two U.S. Navy ships working with NATO had confirmed the incident.

There was no immediate confirmation how many crew members were aboard the vessel when it was taken.

This marks the 4th pirate attack involving a North Korean ship or crew off the coast of Somalia.  The US Navy has rescued two ships.  When Uncle Sam is not around this sort of thing happens.  If any North Korean crew were unfortuante enough to be involved in this case, they probably face a long wait in captivity.  I can’t think of anyone likely to pay their ransom.

Previous pirate posts below:

DPRK ships (2)* Vs. Somali Pirates (1)

DPRK Merchants (1)* vs. Somali Pirates (1)

Freed N. Korean vessel opens new window for U.S.-N. Korea ties

Hat tip to Josh.

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North Korea dictates new prices on February 4

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

Institute for Far Eastern Studies (IFES)
NK Brief No.10-02-09-1
2/9/2010

According to a report from the webzine Daily NK, authorities in the North posted notices at the entrances of all markets across the country in the afternoon of February 4, setting state-wide standard prices for 100 different goods. The prices went into effect the next day. The notice reportedly stated, “In the case of foods not being sold at state-set prices, the state will confiscate all goods.”

The list of 100 items for which prices were set includes rice and corn, indicating that the government is allowing the sale of food items in markets (some of the prices can be seen in the table below). It appears, however, that the state-set prices are causing disruptions in the markets due to the significant difference between Pyongyang’s pricing and the actual prices for which goods in the markets are being sold.

Currently, rice is selling for 350 won/Kg, more than 100 won more than state prices. Corn, costing 180 won/Kg, is trading at 50 won more than the government is demanding. In addition, cooking oil and pork are selling for 1,000 won, 300-400 won more than state-mandated prices. Sources in the North report that, while market traders put on the appearance of adhering to the state’s regulation, many continue to trade at prices dictated by the markets.

Most previous attempts by North Korean authorities to clamp down on markets have failed, making it unlikely that this attempt to mandate prices will have any real impact. Actually, authorities have mandated ‘market price caps’ and regulated prices since the North’s economic adjustment measures taken on July 1, 2002. The government has also banned the sale of grains and other food, but this has not helped the North reach its policy goals and, in fact, has done little but stimulate black market activities. Furthermore, one reason for the recent and significant rise in inflation is the lack of policy for improving the supply sector at a time when currency reforms led to a sudden jump in the purchasing power of farmers and laborers. This adds weight to the argument that these latest price controls will not be maintained with any consistency.

GOODS PRICE (DPRK Won)
Rice (kg)  240
Corn (kg)  130
Pork (kg)  700
Beans (kg)  160
Cooking Oil (bottle) 600
Toothbrush  25
Toothpaste  50
Soap  50
Laundry Detergent 25
Athletic Shoes 500
Toilet Paper 50
Workbook  25-55
Lighter  70
Dress Shoes 1,300
Flashlight  500
Battery  100
Children’s Clothes 1,500
Children’s Padded Clothing 5,000
Socks  350
Apples (kg) 250
Egg  21

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North Korea’s Failed Currency Reform

Sunday, February 7th, 2010

Marcus Noland wrote an op-ed for the BBC which is posted on the Peterson Institute web page.  There are some differences in the two (the BBC piece is shorter), so you can read whichever you prefer.  Below, however, I have posted the graphs from the Peterson Institute web page with some commentary:

noland-rice-corn-2008.JPG

This chart indicates the market for rice was surprisingly efficient before the currency conversion.  Over a two year window, the observed price seems remarkably stable (although the scale of the graph makes it hard to see the the actual level of price volatility).  Still, it seems fair to say that North Korean rice producers, vendors, and smugglers are quick to spot and eliminate regional price differentials through arbitrage. The supply of rice must also be highly highly elastic.  If the North Korean economy was experiencing inflationary pressures in this time, productivity gains and competition would have to have kept the nominal price essentially flat and caused the real price of rice to fall!

The price of corn is somewhat more volatile and I would be interested in hearing theories as to why this is. 

noland-dollar-2008.JPG

This chart is surprising as well. We see a highly stable US Dollar/DPRK won black market exchange rate (though again, the scale of the graph makes it difficult to determine just how stable).  Although the DPRK has not published its monetary policy goals (as far as I am aware), I think it is fair to say that the North Koreans practice exchange rate targeting. Most likely the target is not the US dollar, but the Chinese yuan–which trades at a nearly constant level with the US dollar.  Since China is the DPRK’s largest trading partner, it would make sense that the authorities would aim for exchange rate stability.  This would suggest, however, that the DPRK’s monetary authorities are well aware of the black market value of their currency and have the tools to  affect the exchange rate (i.e. lots of RMB reserves to sell on the black market).  I am not sure how plausible this is, but I am not sure how else we can explain this level of exchange rate stability.

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State Prices Finally Unveiled

Sunday, February 7th, 2010

Daily NK
Jung Kwon Ho
2/5/2010

The North Korean authorities finally released fixed prices for 100 items across the country at 3 P.M. on Thursday.

A Daily NK source inside North Korea revealed the news today in a telephone conversation, saying, “The authorities announced state-designated prices for 100 items in a notice posted at the entrance to markets on Thursday afternoon.

Alongside the message came a warning, “If traders fail to sell goods at the stated prices, goods will be confiscated.”

The price list includes those for rice and corn. By implication, the selling of food has now been officially sanctioned in the market.

If the listed prices are enforced, however, confusion and anger are absolutely inevitable, because the gap between the newly-posted prices and real jangmadang prices is enormous.

For example, the latest real rice price in the jangmadang is 350 won per kilo, while corn is selling for 180 won; however the state-designated prices are 240 won and 130 won respectively. The jangmadang price of pork is around 300 won more expensive than its state-designated price.

Inevitably, therefore, traders’ increasingly wily attempts to circumvent the unrealistic demands of the state are continuing apace, “For now,” the source explained, “traders are pretending to sell for the released prices, but in reality they are selling for the existing jangmadang prices.”

According to the state price list, rice is 240 won per kilo; corn is 130 won; pork is 700 won; soy beans are 160 won; oil is 600 won; a kilogram of apples is 250 won; and a single egg is 21 won.

Meanwhile, a toothbrush is 25 won; bars of soap, tubes of toothpaste and laundry soap are all 50 won; sneakers are 500 won; toilet paper is 50 won; a notebook comes in various sizes between 25 and 55 won; lighters are 70 won; shoes are 1,300 won; a flashlight is 500 won and a single battery 100 won.

Children’s clothes are 1,500 won; children’s winter clothes are 5,000 won; and finally socks are listed as 350 won a pair.

UPDATE: Below is a table of prices from the Daily NK:

dprk-prices-feb-2010.jpg

Click image for larger version

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DailyNK series on Chongryon

Sunday, February 7th, 2010

The Daily NK did a series of articles on the General Association of Korean Residents in Japan (Chongryon or Chosen Soren).  Below are links to all seven parts:

Part 1: Chongryon feels the pinch

Part 2: Debts, Mergers, Collapses and Foreclosures

Part 3: Homecoming Project Speeds Chongryon Demise

Part 4: South Korea Visits Weakened Chongryon

Part 5: Chongryon Remittances and Investments

Part 6: “Study Group,” the Core of Chongryon

Part 7: Study Group Money Laundering Machine

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Friday Fun

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

1. Alejandro Cao de Benos, head of the Korean Friendship Association,  did an interview for an Italian publication (Page 1, Page 2).  Josh is posting a translation: part 1, part 2, part 3, part 4.

2. Flower of Reunification: North Korean propaganda film about Im Suk Yong.  Lots of great footage of the 1989 World Festival of Youth and Students in Pyongyang.  Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7.

3. North Korea has launched a new propaganda campaign aiming to increase living standards.  See the new paintings in the Choson Ilbo here.

 4. Ice skating: Pyongyang might have the DPRK’s only indoor ice skating rink (as far as I know), but ice skating–particularly on frozen rivers and lakes–seems to be pretty popular in the DPRK.  Scenes like the one below (Hyangsan) can be easily found in North Korea on Google Earth:

hyangsan-ice-skating.JPG

5. Reunification fruit.

6. According to Google’s international dailing chart, North Korea and Cuba are the most expensive places to call!

7. North East Asia Matters posts interview with former member of KJI pleasure squad.

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Head of Office 39 replaced

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

According to the Guardian:

It is the nerve centre of North Korea’s money-making operations, the department dedicated to raising hard currency for Kim Jong-il while his country teeters on the brink of collapse.

Room 39 is responsible for some legal ventures, such as the country’s limited exports of ginseng and other items. But according to defectors, most of its energy goes into drug-trafficking, sales of weapons and missile technology, and the production of counterfeit US dollar bills.

Today, it was reported the department’s head – Kim Jong-il’s personal finance manager – has been sacked, possibly in response to international action against the alleged illegal moneymaking. South Korea’s Yonhap news agency said Kim Dong-un was dismissed because he had been blacklisted by so many foreign governments, including the EU in December, leaving him unable to travel on behalf of Room 39’s legal companies. He has been replaced by his deputy, Jon Il-chun, Yonhap said, citing an unidentified source.

Housed in an unremarkable government compound in Pyongyang, Room 39 oversees 120 companies and mines, accounting for a quarter of all North Korean trade and employing 50,000 people, according to Lim Soo-ho, a research fellow at the Samsung Economic Research Institute. He said Kim’s dismissal may be part of attempts to get around international sanctions.

While its inner workings remain a mystery to all but its occupants and the family they serve, Room 39’s role in enabling the regime to survive even in times of widespread famine and international pressure, has come under greater scrutiny since the imposition last year of tough UN sanctions over its nuclear programme.

Some of the money generated by Room 39 is used to buy the loyalty of senior party officials, a role that may take on greater prominence as Kim Jong-il, who suffered a stroke in 2008, prepares to hand over power to his third son, Kim Jong-un. Analysts have estimated that illegal activities account for up to 40% of all North Korean trade and an even higher share of total cash earnings.

Additional information: 

1. More on the EU travel ban is here.

2. Office 39 is reportedly located here.  Kim Jong Il’s office is reportedly nearby here.

3. This week the KWP’s finance director, Pak Nam-gi, was also let go.

4. Mike Madden notes the new director’s  appearance with KJI at an “On the Spot Guidance” visit this week.  Mike also points to a possible appearance the Korea Taepung International Investment Group meeting.

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DPRK remains off US terror list

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

According to Bloomberg

President Barack Obama said he’ll keep North Korea off the U.S. government’s list of states that sponsor terrorism.

North Korea “does not meet the statutory criteria” for inclusion on the list, that automatically imposes sanctions, Obama wrote in a letter to congressional leaders yesterday.

Former President George W. Bush removed North Korea in 2008 after the communist state agreed to inspections of sites suspected of being part of the regime’s nuclear program. It had been designated as a state sponsor of terrorism since 1988.

Last June, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said the administration was considering re-designating North Korea after it conducted nuclear and missile tests earlier in the year.

Cuba, Iran, Sudan and Syria are classified as state sponsors of terrorism, according to the State Department.

Read the full story here:
Obama Keeps North Korea Off U.S. List of Terrorism Sponsors
Bloomberg
Hans Nichols
2/4/2010

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Canada admits 66 DPRK defectors in 2009

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

According to the Korea Times:

Canada granted 66 North Korean defectors refugee status in 2009, which is almost 10 times higher than in 2008, a report said Saturday.

Radio Free Asia, quoting a report from the Canadian Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada, said that more North Koreans are expected to receive the status as there are 59 defectors currently under review.

The North American country’s first case of granting refugee status to a North Korean was in 2000. In 2008, there were seven more cases.

According to the radio, a total of 93 North Koreans had also settled down in the United States as of last December.

Read the full article here:
66 North Koreans Given Refugee Status in Canada
Korea Times
Kim Sue-young
1/31/2010

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