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China-Japan-Koreas | |||
How Capitalist Is N.Korea? | |||
2014-01-06 | |||
More than 80 percent of North Koreans are apparently buying and selling goods in the black market or engaging in other commercial activities to make ends meet, learning about free market economics. Experts say the trend is wide-spread and mature enough to dispel concerns that North Koreans, once reliant on state handouts, would have a hard time adjusting to capitalism if the two Koreas are reunited.
Another study by Seoul National University finds that 70 percent of North Korean defectors had experience selling goods in open-air markets or other commercial activity. And that applies even to 68 percent of defectors who were privileged members of the Workers Party. The younger, the more experience they had, with 92.3 percent in their 30s and 88.2 percent in their 40s. Defectors said their main sources of income were retail sales (37.2 percent), earning foreign currency (11.1 percent), reselling products at higher prices (eight percent) and manual labor (7.1 percent). Hardly any said their main source of income was payments earned working in state-run factories, and 42.2 percent said they received no handouts from the state. In contrast, 13.2 percent of the defectors said their entire household made up to W1 million (US$1=W1,051) selling goods or other commercial activities, while 13.7 percent said they made up to W500,000, 31.7 percent up to W300,000 and 16.6 percent up to W100,000. And 15.1 percent said they made more than W1 million. Eight out of 10 North Koreans did not receive even W10,000 from the state, while more than seven were earning more than W100,000 selling goods. Kim Byung-yeon at Seoul National University said North Koreans sold anything from fruit and vegetables grown in their own gardens to meat and fish, home-made food products, goods stolen from state factories, products smuggled across the border and Cho Bong-hyun of the IBK Economic Research Institute said there are around 500,000 businesses in the North at present. Around 400,000 are small service businesses such as barber shops and restaurants, and around 100,000 are involved in manufacturing. Although private businesses are prohibited in principle, they are tolerated as long as they give a portion of their earnings to the state. This has created employers like store owners and people who own fishing boats or transport. An informal financial market has also sprung up in the form of loan sharks who have grown rich selling goods at open-air markets and have now turned to lending money. "These loan sharks are expanding their influence in the financial market by even settling huge trade payments for merchants, and some rent out business licenses from the state," said one source.
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Posted by:Steve White |
#1 Again, unfortunately Beijing = China is unlikely to accept any formal inter-Korean Reunification between North + South Korea as long as the reunification of mainland China wid TAIWAN remains undone. And as long as a PLA General, NOT KJU, remains in charge of the DPRK's armed forces Beijing by definition is in effective control of the DPRK already despite PCorrect Media, Diplomatic rhetoric to the contrary. FIRST REUNIFICATIONS COME FIRST! Either Pudgy finds a way to dev + deploy Nukes despite China's oversight, or else he finds a way to start or exploit US-China, Other major war in East Asia, MORESO IFF THE DPRK CANNOT WAIT LONG ANYMORE FOR "PEACEFUL" INTERNATIONAL INITIATIVES TO TAKE PLACE. In the view of the DPRK, the worst thing that could possibly happen right now is that a China-Japan andor China-US mil conflict does NOT occur in the East, South China Seas or Indo-Pak, etc. THERE WILL BE A DAY SOON WHEN NO AMOUNT OF WESTERN OR INTERNATIONAL FOOD AID, ETC. TO NORTH KOREA WILL PREVENT OR SUBSTITUTE FOR A CHINESE TAKEOVER ANDOR FORMAL ANNEXATION OF NORTH KOREA. |
Posted by: JosephMendiola 2014-01-06 01:30 |