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Caribbean-Latin America
N. Korea Struggling Under Foreign Debt
2012-01-21
North Korea is struggling to free itself from a mountain of debt the economic basket case incurred mainly from friendly communist countries during the Cold War. Seoul estimates North Korea's external debt at about US$20 billion as of this year, borrowed chiefly from the Soviet Union and East European countries before the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989.

Since its economy deteriorated in the 1990s, the North has failed to repay the principal and interest on the loans from almost all creditor countries. It has borrowed huge amounts of money from European banks but has not paid off most of the debt, and some of the banks have put the North on a blacklist and even refuse to receive fresh savings deposits from the regime.

Russia has reportedly written off some of about $8 billion of North Korean debt for the sake of better bilateral relations. Since the 2000s, Pyongyang has held negotiations with its creditor nations on repaying its debts by installments over 30 years. It seems that Russia wrote off part of the North's debt in exchange for participation in natural resources development in the North.

With the economy worsening further, the North asked Hungary to write off more than 90 percent of its outstanding debt when the financial crisis hit in 2008, the Financial Times reported. But Hungary reportedly wrote off only part of the debt.

The North also asked the Czech Republic to write off 95 percent of some $10 million in debts. It offered to pay the rest or about $500,000 in ginseng.

The regime is also seeking ways to pay off its debts in munitions materials if negotiations do not work out. Pyongyang has reportedly discussed with Iran ways to pay off debts amounting to hundreds of millions of dollars in small submarines.
Posted by:Steve White

#5  I expect that NK will soon discover that approximately $9.99 will buy the Parker Brother's game Monopoly which includes probably $10K in currency. They wouldn't have to purchase all that many to games to pay off their Czech tab. They may also note that purchases of the game Life also include some stock and insurance certificates. The tin figurines in Monopoly could also be melted down and turned into something. Let Juche be your guide.

Alternately, Norks could tell their Czech creditors that they sent the check to the Slovak's.
Posted by: Super Hose   2012-01-21 18:34  

#4  $500,000 in ginseng for repayment. That's a good one. Will have to research who are the European banks who were stupid enough to loan the Norks money. The should be stuck with the worthless debt.
Posted by: Alaska Paul    2012-01-21 14:39  

#3  Oh yeah, you know its going to be a fancy name for it. Move along there's, nothing here that's important. "These aren't the drones you are looking for".
Posted by: texhooey   2012-01-21 06:28  

#2  Any ideas on how long it'll be before Obama bails them out?

Oh he'll call it something like 'in exchange for [unverified] halting of their nuclear program' or some such rot...
Posted by: CrazyFool   2012-01-21 05:22  

#1  I am hoping that North Korea buys a lot more from Iran on credit.

Posted by: BernardZ   2012-01-21 04:01  

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