Archive for the ‘Kaesong Industrial Complex (KIC)’ Category

Kaesong real-estate auction

Thursday, May 11th, 2006

From the Korea Herald:

The ROK government is considering selling off the remaining blocks at the kaesong industrial complex in North Korea in three steps to maximize their value, sources said yesterday.

A 1-million-pyeong compound was built as the first phase of the Gaeseong project and is currently occupied by 15 businesses.

An additional 24 businesses are set to operate since last August and there is currently 580,000 pyeong of land left up for grabs.

The Unification Ministry, Hyundai Asan and Korea Land Corporation – the three organizers of the project – have recently completed its sale plan which will begin next month.

Of the 580,000 pyeong, the government will first offer 220,000 pyeong for sale in June.

Based on the outcome, the government will release the remaining lots in two steps, in September and December.

Sources said by dividing the land lots in the sale, the government is hoping to minimize the risk and maximize their value.

The government is also planning to differentiate the types of businesses entering kaesong in order to increase the level of cooperation within the companies.

Such business fields will include electronics, electricity, machineries, metal and chemicals.

The complex will also be open wide enough for three to four foreign businesses to invest, following a show of interest from business owners from Germany and China.

At Gaeseong there are currently 500 South Korean employees working with about 6,800 North Korean workers.

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US criticizes Kaesong investment

Tuesday, May 2nd, 2006

From the Joong Ang Daily:

Jay Lefkowitz, Washington’s special envoy on North Korean human rights, has continued to criticize the working conditions for North Korean laborers at the Kaesong Industrial Complex, where South Korean companies have located plants.

On the surface, wages and working conditions are the main issue, but experts say there is a more fundamental difference between Seoul and Washington on economic support for the North and on human rights issues there.

In an essay in the Wall Street Journal’s weekend edition, Mr. Lefkowitz said daily wages for North Koreans at the complex were less than $2. That appears to be correct; the monthly minimum wage at the complex is $57, including a 30 percent commission to the government. But because companies at the site pay those wages to a North Korean labor service provider, it is not known how much, if any, of the wages actually find their way into workers’ pockets.

There are currently, 6,850 North Korean workers at the complex; the number will go up by about a fifth this month.

The Unification Ministry here was outraged by Mr. Lefkowitz’s comments, especially by a reference to “slave labor.” The minister, Lee Jong-seok, said on Sunday that he wasn’t sure whether Mr. Lefkowitz was trying to improve human rights in the North or hamper them.

Seoul has put human rights issues in North Korea on the back burner, angering many conservatives here, arguing that the best way to improve rights was by economic development of the North, assisted by massive amounts of economic assistance from South Korea. 

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Kaesong Complex Continues to Grow

Wednesday, April 26th, 2006

According to Yonhap:

The number of North Korean workers at a South Korean-run industrial complex in the North Korean border city of Kaesong rose 22 percent every month over the past one and a half years, the South’s Unification Ministry said Wednesday.  Production increased 36 percent every month due largely to a rise in the number of South Korean factories operating in the complex, according to the ministry.

As of Friday, a total of 6,859 North Korean workers, including 1,047 construction workers, were registered at the complex.

“Some North Korean workers even took annual leaves after their work period was more than one year old. So far, about 120 workers used their annual leaves,” said Go Gyeong-bin, the director general of the Kaesong industrial complex project office at the ministry.

In November 2004, several South Korean companies hired 255 North Korean workers when they moved into the complex at its opening.

The complex, still in its pilot stage, is now home to 11 South Korean companies that produce garments, kitchenware and shoes.

Go said four of them, such as apparel maker Shinwon Co. and socks manufacturer Sunghwa, sent a total of 53 North Korean workers to China for technical training.

“Since the first product was made in December 2004, the total output has amounted to US$27.46 million, which means a monthly average rise of 36 percent. In particular, production exceeded $5 million in March, a 40 percent rise from February,” he said.

The Kaesong industrial complex, located just north of the demilitarized zone dividing the two Koreas, 60 kilometers, or a one-hour drive from Seoul, is the flagship project for inter-Korean cooperation, combining South Korean capital and expertise with the North’s cheap land and labor.

The North Koreans work with about 300 South Koreans in Kaesong.

South Korea hopes to promote the Kaesong complex as a role model for inter-Korean economic partnership, while officials in Washington express concern over its possible negative impact on the multilateral efforts to end North Korea’s nuclear weapons program.

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North Korean Economics Presentations at KEI

Tuesday, April 18th, 2006

Economic Reform and SEZ as Survival Strategy of DPRK
PDF: Deok Ryong Yoon.pdf
Deok Ryong Yoon

Introduction to & implications of Gaesong Industrial Complex Project
PDF: kaesong.faqs.pdf
Ministry of Unification

Gaeseong Industrial complex: Past, Present and Future
PDF: Dong-geun Kim.pdf
Speech by Dong-geun Kim, Chairman of Gaeseong Industrial District Management Committee

Gaeseong Industrial Complex : Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
PDF: kaesong.faqs1.pdf
Ministry of Unification, ROK

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Kaesong workers subject to “Income Taxes”?

Friday, April 14th, 2006

From the Daily NK:

Workers in the Kaesong Industrial Complex are officially paid $57.50/month.

North Korean workers only receive 4500W ($1.5/month) after various deductions. So North Korean workers only take 2.6% of their wage home. This is still twice of the wage of normal North Korean workers, so they are satisfied.

North Korean workers in Kaesong Industrial Complex might not recognize that this is a problem. They are used to obeying the government. 

I would not be happy paying 97.4% income tax.  I try to avoid getting out of my relatively low American taxes as it is.   I would not work (above ground)…unless I was really hungry.
 

 

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Is the Kaesong Industrial zone a Human Rights Issue?

Thursday, April 13th, 2006

Discussion from the Korea Times:

“Yes” Reasons:
-Prolonging the life of the Kim Jong-il regime at the expense of its people
-The North cheats its own workers by not giving them their full pay. There are no unions in Kaesong Industrial Park and workers are expected to work unpaid overtime regularly
“No” Reasons:
-Mini-Marshall Plan
-Workers there earn $58 per month and work under excellent conditions and are much better off than North Korean workers elsewhere.

Other factoids:
Kim Dong-Keun, president of the complex’s Industrial Management Committee said “The North Korean workers are very diligent with high manual skills. Their productivity level is on average 80 percent that of their South Korean counterparts.”

A manager at Hyundai claimed, “Workers’ income at the complex is about 5-10% that of South Korean workers, which is much more than North Koreans generally earn. And they work under better conditions, too”

 

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Kaesong, US technology, trade with villages

Thursday, April 6th, 2006

From the Asia Times

The only currency used in the complex is the US dollar.

No foreign investors have yet signed up for the zone

Washington requires high-tech products destined for North Korea that include US intellectual property to undergo stringent export controls. This has irritated many in the South – particularly after the process delayed the transfer of telecommunications equipment. It also appears highly unlikely that Kaesong-built products will be included in a free-trade agreement between Seoul and Washington that is under negotiation.

Officials of the complex say they have assisted local villagers with heating briquettes and rice, but there is otherwise neither trade nor contact across the fence, indicating that the experience of capitalism is strictly insulated. This assumption is buttressed by relations inside the complex: despite talk of inter-Korean fraternity, social contact between Northern and Southern workers is non-existent.

While the railways between the two Koreas were reconnected in early 2004, theoretically linking Seoul and Sinuiju on North Korea’s Chinese border, it is uncertain when trains will start to run through Kaesong.

“There will be talks on opening the line in July, but it is not certain,” said a South Korean official at Dorasan Station, a giant steel-and-glass edifice on the southern side of the border. The lack of rail transport complicates his firm’s logistics costs, said Stafild’s Moon, whose head office is on the south coast of the peninsula, in Busan.
 

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Kaeson Training Facility

Thursday, March 23rd, 2006

From the Washington Times:

South Korea plans to open a job training center in the North to improve the skills of North Koreans who work in South Korean-owned companies. 

The training center, to open in June, each year will offer training in 13 areas of work to 4,000 employees of midsized companies, the state-funded Human Resources Development Service of Korea said in a statement.

“The center will conduct job training and supply a quality workforce to our companies which will move in the Kaesong Industrial Complex,” it said.

South Korea’s government has allocated $16.4 million to construct the training center in the industrial zone, The Korea Herald reported Thursday. 

Currently, 11 South Korean companies employ 6,000 North Korean workers and 600 South Korean workers in the zone, according to the Ministry of Labor.

The ministry expects that some 300 firms will eventually recruit 90,000 North Korean workers when the first-stage development of the inter-Korean complex is completed in 2007, the newspaper reported.

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North Korean Sneakers gumming up trade talks

Sunday, March 5th, 2006

from Bloomberg:

North Korean workers stitching Made in Korea labels on $150 sneakers may hold the key to a $29 billion free-trade agreement between the U.S. and South Korea, the biggest U.S. accord in a decade.The 6,000 North Koreans, working 48-hour weeks for 1/20th of the pay of their southern colleagues, are churning out pots, sneakers and clothes in a South Korean-funded business park just north of the demilitarized zone that separates the two Koreas.

South Korea’s government is counting on free-trade status to help lure local and overseas companies to the park near Gaeseong, an ancient capital of united Korea. The U.S. says goods made north of the DMZ won’t qualify for special treatment.

“The free-trade agreement must be expanded to include Gaeseong products,” said Kim Dong Keun, chairman of the park’s management committee, in Gaeseong. “I understand that nothing has been set in stone. The matter is still up for negotiation.”

At stake is an accord forecast to boost U.S. exports by $19 billion and lift imports from South Korea, the U.S.’s seventh- largest trading partner, by $10 billion. Talks may start as soon as this month.

The U.S. last year exported $29 billion of goods to South Korea and bought $43 billion of Korean imports, according to the South Korean Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade. The U.S. is the country’s third-largest trading partner.

“The starting point is that an FTA applies to goods originating in the U.S. and the Republic of Korea,” Alexander Vershbow, the U.S. ambassador to South Korea, said at a seminar with economists in Seoul on Feb. 14. “How Gaeseong is treated under the free-trade agreement is going to be a complex issue.”

Europe Waives Duties

South Korean Trade Minister Kim Hyun Chong said at a Feb. 2 press conference with U.S. Trade Representative Rob Portman in Washington that his government expects goods made in Gaeseong to be part of the trade deal. Portman said the agreement would only cover goods produced in South Korea.

“This is a negotiation between the United States and the Republic of Korea,” Christin Baker, Portman’s spokeswoman, said March 2. “Its provisions will apply to goods originating within the territories of the two parties.”

Singapore on March 2 implemented a free-trade agreement with South Korea that eliminated tariffs on all goods, including those from the North Korean industrial zone.

The European Free-Trade Association waives duties on Gaeseong goods if more than 60 percent of the product is sourced from South Korea.

Delayed Plans

At Gaeseong, Moon Chang Seop, president of South Korean shoemaker Samduk Stafild Co., is delaying his expansion plans until the U.S. talks end.

Moon’s company is among 15 South Korean enterprises to have opened factories in the zone since June 2003. He’s hoping to shift all of his $50 million annual production from the southern city of Busan.

“It all depends on whether the U.S. can accept products made in Gaeseong as South Korean-made,” said Moon, 55, as North Korean music played to rows of uniformed seamstresses in his factory. “If the U.S. won’t budge, I won’t be able to move our main plant.”

Seoul-based Hyundai Group, which controls the world’s largest ship-builder, began developing Gaeseong after a landmark summit in 2000 between then South Korean President Kim Dae Jung and his northern counterpart, Kim Jong Il.

The 10-hectare (25-acre) park borders Gaeseong city, the capital of Korea’s Goryeo kingdom from 918 to 1392. It’s ringed by a 2-meter-high (6.5 feet) fence and guarded by North Korean soldiers armed with pistols and semi-automatic weapons.

More than 300 trucks cross the heavily fortified demilitarized zone every day, carrying in raw materials from the South and carting off finished products. Gaeseong is an hour’s drive from both Seoul and Inchon, the nearest South Korean port, and two hours from Pyongyang.

Golf Course

The South Korean government is spending $220 million to expand the site to 330 hectares by 2007, with 24 new tenant companies already building plants.

By 2012, factories will cover 26 square kilometers (10 square miles), according to the Gaeseong committee. It plans to build a supporting urban area of 40 square kilometers, including a 36-hole golf course.

About 730,000 North Koreans, or almost 3 percent of the communist nation’s population, will be housed there by then, said Kim, the committee chairman.

South Korean companies are paying the North Korean government $57.50 a month for each worker, according to Kim. Of that, North Korea collects at least $7.50 in what it calls a social tax.

By comparison, the average monthly wage for factory workers in the South is more than $1,000, according to Hyundai.

Gaeseong isn’t the only obstacle to a trade accord that may be the biggest negotiated by the U.S. since its 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement with Mexico and Canada.

Agriculture, Autos

U.S. officials also will push South Korea to cut trade barriers in agriculture, auto, pharmaceutical and services industries, according to a Feb. 9 report by the research department of the U.S Congress.

South Korea last month reduced quotas on Korean movies to allow more U.S. films to be shown in cinemas and lifted a two- year ban on U.S. beef imports, paving the way for talks to start.

It also agreed to accept some U.S. auto imports, temporarily exempting them from emission rules that are tighter than U.S. federal standards.

U.S. Trade Representative Portman and South Korean Trade Minister Kim said on Feb. 2 that both parties aim to sign an agreement by the end of this year.

At Gaeseong, Oh Sung Chang, the senior managing director of South Korean package maker Taesung Hata Co., is biding his time.

Taesung Hata, which makes cosmetics cases and casings for brands such as Stila, Bobby Brown and Shiseido, plans to quadruple its initial $14 million investment in Gaeseong in the next few years, Oh said.

“Of course, the outcome of the trade negotiations may influence our decision,” he said, as North Korean workers assembled compact-powder casings in the Taesung factory. “We await a favorable outcome.”

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Culture Shock in Kaesong

Thursday, March 2nd, 2006

From the Standard (China) and LA Times:
3/2/2006

The Kaesong industrial park is only an hour from Seoul but it’s like traveling to the moon, writes Barbara Demick
It takes barely an hour to drive from downtown Seoul to the other side of the demilitarized zone, but the culture shock is such that you might as well be commuting to the moon.

Mobile phones, books, newspapers, magazines, videos, laptops, MP3 players and many other appurtenances of 21st-century life must be checked on the south side of the border.

Also best left behind are any wisecracks about the North Korean regime, or in particular its leader, Kim Jong Il.

“You’ve got to watch what you say,” said Kim Yi Gyeom, a South Korean telecommunications worker standing in a long line of Monday-morning commuters waiting to go north. “The spirit of openness has not come to North Korea yet.”

In the boldest experiment to date with inter-Korean cooperation, nearly 500 South Koreans are working side by side with more than 6,000 North Koreans in a year-old industrial park just north of the DMZ.

South Koreans are assuming all the financial risk, having invested more than US$2 billion (HK$15.6 billion).

The South would like to reduce political tensions and reap the benefit of inexpensive North Korean labor so its manufacturers can compete with China.

For the North Koreans, the Kaesong experiment is a way to build its economy with only the most limited dose of openness to the outside world. But the political risk is all for the North Korean government, which fears that contact with the better-fed, better-clothed South Koreans could endanger its grip on power.

“It is natural that there is a culture gap,” said Hwang Boo Gi, director of the Kaesong Industrial District, who led a group of foreign journalists through the park Monday.

“We are talking about the difference between capitalism and socialism.”

Or as a North Korean official, Han Cheol, said diplomatically, “We like to emphasize what we have in common, like our heritage, and not our differences.”

Nevertheless, the contrast is particularly glaring when coming from Seoul, the high-tech, neon-lit capital of the world’s 12th-largest economy, a mere 58 kilometers away. Around the industrial park, which lies outside the center of the city of Kaesong, there is little but desiccated rice paddies and yellow hills denuded long ago by people scratching for firewood. Nearby is an abandoned agricultural college, its crumbling facade decorated by a faded red sign trumpeting the achievements of the North Korean Workers’ Party. Scrawny goats graze outside two-story white- washed houses with windows made of plastic sheeting.

The industrial park itself is surrounded by 8km of perimeter fencing and poker-faced, rifle-toting North Korean soldiers.

Inside the fenced compound everything from the toilets to the machinery are South Korean-made, mostly the latest, state-of-the-art models. Although all 11 companies now operating in the 9.31-hectare pilot project are South Korean, the North Koreans keep a tight rein over the work environment. No South Korean money is accepted here, even at a Family Mart convenience store set up for the exclusive use of South Korean employees.

North Korean patriotic music in praise of Kim Jong Il blares over the loudspeakers of a futuristic warehouse where North Korean women in crisp royal blue uniforms stitch athletic shoes using brand-new sewing machines.

The monthly salaries of US$57.50 for each North Korean worker – regardless of position – are paid directly to the North Korean government, which in turn gives the workers about US$8, more than double the average monthly salary. South Korean companies have asked repeatedly to pay the workers directly and to give bonuses for better work, but have been refused.

Even New Year’s gifts such as extra food and warm clothing could be given only after elaborate negotiations to make sure everybody was getting the same.

South Koreans, many of whom live for weeks at a time in modular housing in the complex, have their own cafeteria and their own medical clinic, all off- limits to North Koreans.

Last year, stories appeared in the South Korean media about a purported Romeo-and-Juliet romance between a North Korean woman and a South Korean man. But people at Kaesong said the story was apocryphal because the North Korean women are never alone.

There have been countless cases of culture shock. When Shinwon held a fashion show in October – complete with disco music, strobe lighting and slinky models in denim mini-skirts – it offended the conservative sensibilities of some North Koreans.

For their part, some South Koreans were taken aback recently to see the North Koreans workers dancing and singing enthusiastically to an accompaniment of accordion music at a fuel- pump factory. It turned out they were rehearsing in anticipation of Kim Jong Il’s birthday on February 16.

As is often the case, many misunderstandings resulted from acts of kindness.

South Koreans have tried covertly to give medicine from their private clinic to ailing North Koreans.

One South Korean employee was accused of trying to bribe a North Korean soldier when he gave him two packages of instant ramen noodles, according to a military source.

In a more serious incident, a South Korean was caught trying to distribute Christian literature, which is strictly anathema in the communist country, the source said.

“Almost every day something happens, some small quarrel or misunderstanding. But because Kaesong is so important to Kim Jong Il, the North Koreans choose to ignore it,” said Lim Eul Chul, a scholar at South Korea’s Kyungnam University who has written extensively on Kaesong.

Both sides have ambitious plans for Kaesong. When fully completed in 2012, the enclave is supposed to encompass 64.75 square kilometers and employ 700,000 workers.

The biggest impediment to the project’s success might be North Korea’s ongoing nuclear weapons program and its hostility to the United States. The tensions have limited the nature of the products manufactured at Kaesong to low technology – with anything having potential dual use for military purposes prohibited – and mostly confined sales to the domestic market within South Korea.

Although Shinwon Apparel, for example, supplies clothing to Kmart and Wal-Mart, among others, those garments are largely produced in Vietnam. US officials, who earlier this month announced negotiations toward a free- trade pact with South Korea, have said they would not consider Kaesong products to be labeled “Made in South Korea.”

With no progress on the horizon in its long war of nerves with the United States, the North Koreans have no choice but to chum it up with South Korea. If they are merely holding their noses and tolerating the presence of the South Koreans for their money, they go to pains not to show it.

The well-disciplined North Korean cadres who were showing foreign reporters around Kaesong Monday all lavishly praised their South Korean counterparts.

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