- The Washington Times - Wednesday, September 25, 2024

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SEOUL, South KoreaNorth Korea’s regime is trying to reassert control over its economy, but it is finding that the genie of market mechanisms cannot easily be shoved back into its bottle.

Regime leader Kim Jong-un, who took power in 2011, confronted two major policy challenges in recent years, one political and one economic. Mr. Kim’s failed personal summitry with President Trump led to a renewed focus on the country’s nuclear programs, and the COVID-19 pandemic that started in 2020 led to harsh border lockdowns.

Analysts say one casualty of the shifts was the regime’s enthusiasm for experimenting with pro-market reforms to boost the country’s long-ailing economy.

Ordinary North Koreans, disappointed by the failure of his U.S. overture, also suffered from a sharp cutback in cross-border trade with China, long the country’s leading trade partner.

A new factor has entered play. In two summits between Mr. Kim and Russian President Vladimir Putin in 2023 and 2024, Moscow has extended a lifeline to Pyongyang without market concessions that undercut the regime’s control of the economy.

Even so, North Koreans’ poverty amid prosperous, high-tech Northeast Asia is impossible to ignore, which may explain Mr. Kim’s break with Pyongyang precedents by showcasing his daughter to the North Korean public. The message: The pocketbook deprivations North Koreans are suffering in service of nuclear arms guarantee their next generation’s future.

Market economics, pros and cons

“When Kim Jong-un delivered his first public speech in April 2012, he said the residents of North Korea would not have to tighten their belts again,” Kim Byung-yeon, a scholar who studies the North Korean economy at Seoul National University (SNU), told foreign reporters. “From 2012 to 2018, he had been showing some pragmatism in policies, but from 2019, he has turned around and is arguing to ‘recover socialism.’”

The conundrum facing Pyongyang’s economic managers is the clash between the need for socialist control and the demands for market efficiency. The stormy dynamic has played out since the 1990s.

North Korea’s communist economy was rocked by the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s. No longer offered decades of preferential trade terms, North Korea faced deadly famines in the mid-1990s.

With state distribution systems defunct, the desperate regime opened a capitalist window, allowing private trade with China for essential foodstuffs and medicines. Even after famines subsided, jangmadang (“market grounds”) remained operating. Their efficient pricing and distribution mechanisms infiltrated the wider economy.

A 2024 report by the South Korean Ministry of Unification, based on interviews with 6,351 defectors, found that 70.5% of respondents relied on private markets for food and 44.9% for medicines.

The investment class that emerged — the “donju” or “money masters” — has shifted in recent years from trading to public-private investments in everything from luxury water parks to light industrial factories making goods for local consumption.

Pyongyang’s policy has vacillated between encouraging the jangmadang and the donju for the national benefit and cracking down on them.

Market forces eroded Pyongyang’s economic control, and cross-border distribution nets that supplied the “gray” markets enabled “black” smuggling of South Korean music, TV shows and films.

The regime maintains “effective control over the military and most of the people, but what they struggle with is control of market resources,” said Peter Ward, a North Korea researcher at Seoul’s Sejong Institute. “Once the genie was out of the bottle, they have never been able to put it back in.”

It’s not for lack of trying. Since 2019, the regime has been trying two policy lines.

“Before 2019, distribution had been led by the market or private sector, but Kim Jong-un argued it should be controlled and governed by the state, so the first constraint he tried to put on the market was selling and buying food,” said SNU’s Mr. Kim.

Grain markets are now back in government hands, though Andrei Lankov, a North Korea watcher at Seoul’s Kookmin University, said it is unknown what percentage of the population receives a ration and what percentage still buys from markets.

The second policy was to sharply raise the salaries of midlevel officials as much as twenty-five-fold. The aim, Mr. Kim said, was to slash official corruption and rent-seeking, as bureaucrats turned to bribes to maintain their incomes and to keep their organizations running. The Unification Ministry’s report found bribery has doubled under Mr. Kim, with 93.1% of respondents saying they perceived widening wealth gaps.

Even with the higher wages, government bureaucrats earn as little as one-sixth of what many donju take in, analysts said.

Despite the redistribution campaign, indications are that Kim Jong-un’s 14-year reign has left North Koreans poorer, hurt by heavy United Nations sanctions and the COVID setbacks. SNU’s Mr. Kim cited a 12% dimming of night lighting nationwide from 2017 to 2019. A separate analysis estimated a 25% drop in national income from 2017 to 2022, he said.

Reading the tea leaves

North Korea’s economic path forward, on the micro and macro fronts, remains murky. Outside analysts are forced to assemble a puzzle with many missing pieces. Pyongyang does not publish economic reports but relies on data released by North Korea’s few trade partners, clandestine interviews with North Korean residents, satellite imagery and defector accounts.

It’s a tough call.

“Nuclear advancement is very visible,” said SNU’s Mr. Kim. “Economic development is not so visible.”

Mr. Ward agreed. “We do see conflicted signals,” he said.

Citing pandemic declines in defections and cellphone informants, Mr. Lankov said, “Our knowledge of the North Korean domestic situation is at a nadir.”

Complicating the picture even more is Russia, which has been buying North Korean munitions for its war in Ukraine.

“Russia is providing, probably, some military technologies and probably also giving North Korea food or cash,” Mr. Ward said. “But relations with China are not in the best place, as Russia and North Korea love flouting sanctions, which makes China look bad.”

Arms sales may help Pyongyang balance its books. SNU’s Mr. Kim said Russia customarily runs an annual $2 billion trade surplus with North Korea.

However, the economy remains a major source of worry for the regime.

Kim Jong-un is under pressure as all his plans for economic growth have collapsed,” said Mr. Lankov. “He is dependent on arms trade with Russia and unilateral trade with China.”

State news stories signal Mr. Kim’s sensitivity to his public’s woes. North Korea’s two hereditary transfers of power, in 1994 and 2011, were surprises. Neither the second- nor third-generation leader had been publicly revealed before they were elevated to the top job.

Kim Jong-un has changed that. Since 2022, he has been parading his preteen daughter, Ju Ae, at public events such as missile tests.

SNU’s Mr. Kim, suggested that while North Korea’s leader has broken his promise by requiring his people to “tighten their belts,” he could make the case that “it is the responsibility of parents to make sacrifices or feel hunger to protect our children’s safety.”

As such, Ju Ae’s appearance may be an attempt to argue that today’s nuclear programs — which some in South Korea estimate consume more than a quarter of North Korea’s gross domestic product — will be paying dividends tomorrow.

“He has a clear objective to put her at the forefront,” SNU’s Mr. Kim said, “to encourage people to recognize his [nuclear] achievements.”

• Andrew Salmon can be reached at asalmon@washingtontimes.com.

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