Economic reform comes slowly

October 9th, 2003

from a great story in the Economist:

benefits of reform:

  • The electricity supply has slightly improved in Pyongyang, as well as on the east coast in Hamhung and Chongjin. Apartment-block lights are now on for much longer.
  • Second-hand bicycles, from Japan and China, are numerous, particularly in cities on the poor, industrial east coast.
  • Farmers are allowed their own small gardens, and farmers’ markets are now referred to simply as “markets”, because, as well as food, they sell consumer goods. Significantly, these markets have been given official approval. In June, the government appealed for help from other countries in running them. As Marcus Noland of the Institute for International Economics in Washington, DC, explains, one immediate effect of the reforms is that there are now products available for hard currency, such as video players and movies like “The Lion King” dubbed in Korean, which were previously unobtainable. The government is also encouraging foreign investment in industries such as mining, energy, agriculture and information technology
  • The leadership recently gave its approval for a South Korean company that assembles cars in North Korea to launch a marketing campaign.
  • Mobile-phone services have been started in the country’s main cities and along its motorways.
  • North Korea’s tourism authority claims that 2,000 Motorola and Nokia mobile handphones were sold in Pyongyang between November 2002 and August 2003. This in a country where barely a million land lines exist, out of a total population of 23m.
  • The Hermit Kingdom recently announced plans to develop broadband internet capabilities to improve the business environment. The plan is to link the domestic intranet, called Kwangmyong, to the internet. The North’s national domain designation, “.kp”, is still not in use, but the government has reportedly been testing e-mail addresses incorporating it. There is even an internet café in Pyongyang, though at $10 per hour it is affordable only to the few tourists, diplomats and journalists who visit the city. Currently, only Mr Kim and a few privileged others can use the optical communications lines supplied to North Korea by China’s China Telecom. Contrast this to the state of affairs in the south, which has the world’s greatest penetration of high-speed broadband connections and where more than 65% of households now have internet access.

These observations say little about how the economy as a whole is doing. The sad truth seems to be that the leadership in the North undertook its partial reforms out of necessity, not because it had understood or embraced the market. Rather, for the past 15 months, according to a Korea expert, Kongdan Oh, at the Institute for Defence Analyses in Virginia, the country has been “creatively muddling through”. While the average North Korean has more economic freedom, the economy is near collapse.

Nicholas Eberstadt of the American Enterprise Institute, in Washington, DC, estimates that, if anything, economic decline has accelerated, not reversed. Last year’s price and wage increases saw prices rise 10 to 20-fold and wages rise by 20 times or more, the idea being to bring them more into line with market rates. But the increases have not been matched by measures to boost output, so inflation has spiralled out of control. The price of staple foods, for instance, has risen by as much as 400%, and the country continues to rely on foreign handouts to feed its people.

In a recent paper, Mr Noland argues that those with access to foreign exchange, such as senior party officials, do not feel the effects of inflation as severely as salaried workers who have no access to foreign exchange. So for urban residents with access to hard currency, in some respects things are much better. But for the bulk of the population, things are quite grim. As much as 80% of an average family’s income now goes towards food.

Just how committed is the regime of Kim Jong Il to its programme of market reform? Probably not very. It shows no sign of embracing reforms that could potentially undermine the state’s control. It continues to emphasise “military-first” policies, reserving the best of everything for the army it depends on. And even if greater economic reform were undertaken, it is far from certain that it would be successful any time soon.

The economy continues to suffer from a lack of energy, transport infrastructure and basic foodstuffs. Many factories—all of which under the reforms now have to pay their own way—have been shut down, leaving people without jobs and therefore no money to buy food. And since the North admitted last year to its illicit nuclear programme, aid flows have diminished and oil deliveries by the Korean Peninsula Energy Development Organisation have been suspended.

Foreign investors still stay away and the few companies that have been bold enough to invest in the North, such as Hyundai Asan, have lost millions of dollars. So, though much has changed in North Korea over the past 15 months, the probability is that more will stay the same

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Call for Kaesong investors

October 1st, 2003

From the BBC:

North Korea has unveiled the terms under which foreign investors will be lured to a ground-breaking industrial zone near the tense border with South Korea.

Two South Korean companies – Korean Land and an arm of the Hyundai conglomerate – are developing an international business park in Kaesong, part of a package of cautious economic reforms in the Stalinist country.

So far, more than 1,000 South Korean firms have enquired about setting up shop in Kaesong, where labour costs will be a tiny fraction of those south of the border.

The North Korean Government now promises investors favourable tax rates, but there are still considerable concerns over whether it will allow businesses much economic freedom.

Most of the companies so far interested in Kaesong are in light manufacturing, particularly textiles.

Depending on their line of business, these firms will be taxed at up to 14%, less than half the rate levied in the South.

Pyongyang is, however, especially keen to lure hi-tech firms, which will be subject to a tax rate of just 10%.

Investors will have to pay a number of other smaller levies, and must adhere to a minimum monthly wage of $50.

Such incentives have sparked a flurry of interest in the South, but many companies remain wary.

They will be forced to hire workers through a North Korean state agency whose powers and attitude remain unclear.

And there is still little confidence in the fundamental stability of North Korea, which has turned to economic reform in recent years, but which remains virulently opposed to most forms of foreign influence.

The Kaesong development does, however, seem to be a relatively permanent arrangement.

It forms part of a large-scale construction project in the region, which is just 50 kilometres northwest of Seoul.

Elsewhere the focus is on tourism, especially scenic Mount Kumgang on the country’s east coast, which Hyundai has been trying to develop for five years, with mixed success.

There is also a Unification Park, which will be the venue for reunions of families split by the country’s division.

Most significant are major road and rail developments which mark the first time the two rival countries have re-established transport links since the end of the Korean war in 1953.

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North Korean bank heist?

September 19th, 2003

This shocking story from the BBC:

A small-time bank robbery does not make headline news in many parts of the world. But when three armed robbers held up a bank in secretive North Korea last month, the incident was said to be unprecedented in the country’s history.

The full force of North Korean officialdom appears to have united in search of the culprits.

Immediately after the incident, North Korean leader Kim Jong-il himself issued an order to “unconditionally arrest the criminals”, according to a senior North Korean official currently in China.

The authorities are said to have distributed wanted posters throughout the country.

The Ministry of People’s Security and the State Security Department have also fully mobilised in the hunt for the criminals.

Security forces defending the border areas are on special guard duty to prevent the robbers from escaping.

Accurate and up-to-date information is notoriously difficult to obtain from communist North Korea.

The bank robbery has only now come to light – in an article in the South Korean newspaper Choson Ilbo – although the incident happened in August.

The three robbers are said to have entered the Foreign Trade Bank of Korea in the middle of the day, forcing bank employees to lie on the floor while they stole approximately $40,000 from the vault.

Read the full story here:
N Korea rocked by bank heist
BBC
2003-9-19

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Bush warns N Korea on drugs

September 16th, 2003

BBC
9/16/2003

The United States is increasingly convinced that North Korea has a direct role in global drugs production and trafficking, US President George W Bush has said.

In his annual report to US Congress on drug-producing nations, Mr Bush identified 23 countries which the US considers to be major drug-trafficking or major drug-producing centres, including Afghanistan, Pakistan and China.

North Korea was not on the list but the US president said there was evidence that “state agents and enterprises” were involved in the narcotics trade.

The US, which has been pressuring North Korea over its nuclear ambitions, also warned that a proposed food donation to the North could be at risk because of fears it would be diverted to the military.

Mr Bush said in the report that the US would step up efforts to work with the affected countries in the region in order to prevent such trade.

Haiti and Burma ‘failing’

“Although there is no evidence that narcotics originating in or transiting [through] North Korea reach the United States, the US is intensifying its efforts to stop North Korean involvement in illicit narcotics production and trafficking,” Mr Bush said in his report.

“We are deeply concerned about heroin and methamphetamine linked to North Korea being trafficked to East Asian countries,” he added.

The assessment also warned that Haiti and Burma had “failed demonstrably” to meet international obligations to fight drugs trafficking or production.

Mr Bush’s comments come at a time of continued tension between the US and North Korea over the reclusive state’s nuclear programme.

Aid accusations

The US has repeatedly accused North Korea of illegal drugs and arms smuggling, charges North Korea has denied.

Mr Bush cited in his report the seizure of $50m worth of heroin smuggled from a North Korean state-owned ship off the coast of Australia in April as evidence of a link between the country and drugs trafficking.

On Monday the US also accused the North Korean Government of preventing international food aid reaching those for whom it was intended.

North Korea had alleged that the US and Japan had put pressure on United Nations aid agencies to stop or delay food shipments to North Korea.

However US State Department spokesman Adam Ereli said the US was concerned that international food aid intended for desperately needy civilians was being diverted to the North Korean military.

The US has said it will continue to fund a separate programme to build low-risk nuclear reactors for North Korea.

The programme is managed by the New York-based Korean Peninsula Energy Development Organization, or KEDO.

The US said its $3.72m of funds would only be used for administrative expenses, since construction of the reactors has been suspended since the row broke out a year ago over North Korea’s nuclear plans.

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N. Korea shifts towards capitalism

September 14th, 2003

Washington Post Foreign Service
Anthony Faiola
September 14, 2003

Notes on the DPRK’s new Fiat:

The first commercial billboards (ever) are going up in Pyongyang.  Fiat is in the Hermit Kingdom.  The billboards are part of what is dubbed the first corporate media blitz to hit North Korea.

Pyeonghwa Motor Corps., a South Korean firm with ties to the Unification Church, coaxed the DPRK government into allowing the campaign.  Pyeonghwa began assembling cars in North Korea 18 months ago using imported Fiat parts.

Creating the ad campaign was not easy, said John Kim.  The government rejected many billboard proposals.

The company began publishing asd in government sponsored trade magazines showcasing the “Whistle” (The name of the car in the DPRK.  Named after a famous song).  Also a SUV model was launched.  Commercials have also appeared on TV.

Cars cost $14,000 and it would take a north Korean 15 years of labor to save up enough money.

When Pyeonghwa opened its $20m factory about 40 miles west of Pyongyang last year, the company hoped to sell 1000 cars in 12 months, but it has unloaded only half that number in 18 months.  Most have gone to government officials and diplomats.

There are only two gas stations in Pyongyang, and the company does not offer financing 

Notes on Politics:

Pyongyang’s news agency recently described new markets as desigend to “dramatically improve the country’s standard of living.”

This month, the North Korean’s announced a cabinet reshuffle that raised Pak Pong Ju, a former chemical industries manager, to the loftier position of Premier.  He is seen as being interested in reforms.

Kim Jong Il has been working to give the authority to fire a worker to factory managers, as opposed to Party officials.

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The fall and arrest of Mr. Yang

September 7th, 2003

UPDATE 2 (2003-9-7): The BBC reports that Mr. Yang has lost his appeal:

A business tycoon once listed as China’s second richest man has lost an appeal against his 18-year sentence for fraud.

Yang Bin, known as China’s flower king, was found guilty in July of a string of economic crimes including bribery and illegal land use.

The High People’s Court of Liaoning province on Sunday also upheld fines against him and his companies totalling 8.3m yuan ($1m), said the official Xinhua news agency.

Yang is one of a number of high-profile businessmen to have fallen foul of the law in China over the last year.

Before his fall from grace, he was one of China’s most flamboyant businessmen, and was named by North Korea to head a free-market experimental zone across from the Chinese border.

Border arrest

A Dutch citizen, he built a business empire growing tulips amid the industrial decay of north-east China and by 2001 had a fortune close to $1bn.

However, much of Yang’s wealth had, it turned out, been based not on flowers but on illegal property development.

In what may have been a last bid to avoid prosecution, he accepted an offer from the North Korean government to run a new free trade zone inside the Stalinist state.

But last October, as he prepared to cross the border, Chinese police moved in and took him away.

UPDATE 1 (2003-7-14): Mr. Yang has been sentenced to 18 years by a Chinese court. According to the BBC:

A business tycoon once listed as the second richest man in China has been sentenced to 18 years in prison for fraud.
Yang Bin, known as China’s flower king, was found guilty of a string of economic crimes including bribery and illegal land use.

He is one of a number of high-profile businessmen to have fallen foul of the law in China in recent months.

Before his fall from grace, Yang Bin was one of China’s most flamboyant businessmen, and was named by North Korea to head a free-market experimental zone across from the Chinese border.

A Dutch citizen, he built a business empire growing tulips amid the industrial decay of north-east China.

By 2001 he was listed as China’s second richest man, with a fortune close to $1bn.

But with fame came suspicion and soon a government investigation.

Much of Yang’s wealth had, it turned out, been based not on flowers but on illegal property development.

False receipts were used to get his company listed on the stock market. As his empire began to crumble around him, Yang made what may have been a last bid to avoid prosecution.

He accepted an offer from the North Korean government to run a new free trade zone inside the Stalinist state.

But last October, as he prepared to cross the border, Chinese police moved in and took him away.

A spokesman for Yang, chairman of Hong Kong-listed Euro-Asia Agricultural (Holdings), said he planned to appeal.

Read the full story here:
China’s ‘orchid king’ gets 18 years
BBC
2003-7-14

ORIGINAL POST (2002-10-4): According to the Washington Post, Mr. Yang has been arrested.

Chinese sources, including journalists, said police detained Yang Bin, a 39 year old multimillionaire and flower mogul, on suspicion of tax evasion in the northern Chinese city of Shenyang.

A Chinese source said that the move did not mean China opposed North Korea’s fledgling efforts to reform its economy.  China, he said, was simply against the choice of Yang Bin to head the effort.

Nonetheless, Chinese economists said Yang’s detention constitutes an embarrassment for Kim Jong Il and could threaten reform efforts.

Within the last few days, Chinese journalists say, China’s Ministry of Propaganda has issued three circulars banning China’s press from in depth coverage of Yang.  Analysts in China say they believe this means Beijing is uncomfortable with his new status in North Korea.

The Sinuiju region draws its inspiration from the special economic zones that china established in the 1980s .

Yang said any foreigner could travel to Sinuiju without a visa as long as they had a a visa to return to China (as of Sept 30).  But those plans hit a roadblock on Thursday when North Korean authorities declined to allow foreign correspondents travel with Yang to the Zone.  Yang’s problems then started snowballing when an impromptu news conference he called to explain the visa restrictions was declared “illegal” by Chinese police.

Yang’s shares have been suspended from the Hong Kong Stock Exchange because the company has not made sufficient disclosures.

Yang has been reticent about how he got the North Korean appointment–one of the stranger events in Pyongyang’s checkered attempts to open to the outside world.  In an interview with a Chinese magazine, he said that he had been “Sharing my agricultural technology with the people of North Korea “for more than a year” and that “my selfless help won the trust of the Korean people.”

Yang struck up a friendship with Kim Jong-il several years ago.  Yang took his corporate jet to Pyongyang and worked hard to cultivate Kim.  Kim traveled to Shenyang to meet Yang.  Yang offered to donate greenhouses to North Korea which is desperate for ways to grow food, and Kim accepted.

Some Chinese economists and officials have privately criticized North Korea’s choice of Yang, saying he is emblematic of a type of Chinese businessman who amasses fortunes making use of connections and legal loopholes.

Yang has said he hoped to turn Sinuiju into a trading and manufacturing and trading hub.  Chinese cources, however, said that so far Yang has been approached only by developers looking to turn the area into a gambling and entertainment enclave for Chinese tourists.  Gambling is illegal in China.

Source:
The Fall of Mr. Yang
Washington Post
2002-10-4
Page A25

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DPRK cabinet reshuffle

September 4th, 2003

Financial Times
September 4, 2003
Page 4
by Andrew Ward 

Kim Jong Il yesterday staged a rare cabinet reshuffle, replacing several top officials with younger men in an apparent attempt to strengthen his power base. 

Mr. Kim face a twin threat to his Stalinist regime from looming economic collapse and increasing pressure from a US government angered by the state’s development of nuclear weapons. 

Mr. Kim replaced his prime minister, two of his three deputy premiers and five ministers in what South Korean reporters said was the most far-reaching government shake-up for five years. 

Analysts in the south speculate Mr. Kim was replacing ageing officials associated with Kim Il Sung his late father and former leader.  In their place, had come younger officials more loyal to the current leader. 

Diplomats and intelligence officials, who admit their assessments about the reclusive regime are little better than guess work, hoped the promotion of younger officials would clear the way for political and economic reforms resisted by the old guard. 

Economic reforms introduced last year – wages and prices were raised to meet market values – fuelled hopes that North Korea might open up, but there have been few further signs of change. 

Some of those replaced held important economic planning posts, perhaps reflecting Mr. Kim’s concern about the parlous state of the country’s economy. 

South Korea‘s Yonhap news agency said 52% of North Korea’s new power elite was aged under 55.  However there was no sign of a shift away from Mr. Kim’s “army first policy” of concentrating power and resources with North Korea’s 1.1 million-strong army. 

Most top military leaders kept their jobs – including Mr. Kim himself, who was re-elected Chairman of the National Defense Commission, the country’s most powerful body – and the legislature approved measures to strengthen the “nuclear deterrent force”. 

Pak Pong Ju, former minister for the chemical industry, was elected prime minister, replacing Hong Song Nam, according to North Korean media monitored by Yonhap. 

“The cabinet will work out a scientific and bold economic strategy and operational plan as required by the new century and dynamically implement them to build a strong national economic power suited to the great prosperous powerful nation,” Mr. Pak said.

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Two Koreas boost crossborder trade

August 28th, 2003

BBC
8/28/2003

North and South Korea have signed a landmark agreement to increase direct trade, the latest step in the slow economic thaw between the two enemies.

According to the agreement, made at bilateral talks unrelated to the simultaneous discussions over nuclear capability, South Korean firms will be encouraged to set up in the North.

The town of Kaesong, just north of the border, has been selected as the site of an industrial park, currently being built by South Korea’s Hyundai.

The two governments will open a corporate liason office in Kaesong, which will deal with the many southern companies keen to exploit cheap northern labour.

Slowly opening

Cross-border economic contacts have become frequent in recent years.

But almost all the $270m (£172m) in north-south trade so far this year has been conducted through intermediary countries, a formality the new agreement aims to dispose of.

The deal represents another step in the extremely slow economic opening of the stalinist North, which long operated in complete isolation from the world economy.

Over the past three years, Pyongyang has reformed its currency, invited visits from foreign investors, cautiously liberalised some prices and planned various – mainly abortive – schemes along the lines of the Kaesong industrial zone.

Reliance on aid

The motivation in much of this, analysts say, is the desperate economic situation in the north.

A series of natural disasters in the 1990s crippled northern agriculture, and the government has done little to put the sector back on its feet.

North Korea – which long rejected outside help – has become increasingly dependent on aid.

This latest agreement concedes to the South the right to oversee the distribution of food aid in the North.

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Koreans unite for student games

August 20th, 2003

BBC
8/20/2003

More than 200 North Korean athletes, officials and journalists have arrived in South Korea for the World Student Games, after days of political wrangling.

The North Korean delegation flew south for the games at Daegu, after reversing a decision to withdraw from the event over a recent anti-North flag-burning protest in the South Korean capital Seoul.

The row erupted at a delicate time for inter-Korean relations, just a week before crucial talks on the North’s nuclear weapons programme are due to get under way.

In a further sign that relations between the two sides are thawing, both Koreas have agreed in principle to field a unified team for the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens.

The agreement was announced on Wednesday in a joint statement by the two delegations attending the Daegu games.

Athletes from North and South Korea marched behind a single “Korean Peninsula” flag for the first time at the 2000 Sydney Olympics but they competed as separate countries during the actual competition.

North Korea also sent a large delegation to last year’s Asian Games, participating for the first time in a major sporting event hosted by South Korea.

The BBC’s Charles Scanlon in Seoul says the North’s participation in those games was seen as an important symbol of warming ties.

But he says the next big test will come next week in Beijing, when the North Koreans sit down with their Asian neighbours and the United States for six-party talks aimed at putting a stop to Pyongyang’s nuclear ambitions.

Triumphant arrival

The North Korean delegation arrived in the South on Wednesday waving their hands and smiling at supporters waiting for them at the airport.

“Brothers in the South, we are happy to see you,” said Jon Guk-man, head of the North Korean delegation.

Reuters news agency said South Korea was paying all the expenses for the North’s team, which organisers consider a major draw in an event short on big sporting names.

North Korea’s about-face over its decision to boycott the games came after South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun expressed regret for last Friday’s anti-North protest, describing it as “inappropriate”.

Mr Roh’s government has been struggling to maintain good relations with Pyongyang, despite signs that the North is pushing ahead with the development of nuclear weapons.

His conciliatory remarks contrasted with comments by US President George W Bush on Monday, who said that North Korean leader Kim Jong-il was a “dangerous man” who loved “rattling sabres”.

Pyongyang has repeatedly warned that the US must change its “hostile policy” towards the North if forthcoming Beijing talks, which will also include Washington, are to make progress.

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US reopens Korean veteran talks

July 9th, 2003

BBC
7/9/2003

North Korean and US officials are to resume talks on recovering the remains of US soldiers still missing from the Korean War.

Negotiators will meet on Thursday in the Thai capital of Bangkok to discuss a schedule for new search operations, a US spokesman said.

Previous talks were suspended last year as tensions between the two nations rose after the US accused North Korea of developing a nuclear weapons programme.

The US search for remains, involving forensic experts, has focused on several key battlefields.

These include the Chongchon River vicinity, north of Pyongyang, and in the Chosin Reservoir area, scene of some of the most savage fighting of the war in the final months of 1950.

More than 8,000 US servicemen are listed as unaccounted for from the Korean War, which ended 50 years ago this month.

‘Humanitarian work’

US officials stressed that the talks would not focus on the subject of North Korea’s alleged weapons programmes, describing it instead as a “separate, stand-alone, humanitarian” issue.

“This has been the US policy in our dealings with all other countries,” US Defense Department spokesman Lieutenant Commander Jeff Davis told the Associated Press news agency.

“And it has enabled us to continue moving ahead in our humanitarian work even if there may be policy difficulties in other areas.”

Since 1996, when North Korea first permitted the US to search for remains of servicemen, around 200 sets of remains have been recovered.

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