The disaster in outer space is matched by the
disaster on the ground
With
global attention focused on North Korea’s attempted launch and humiliating
failure today of a multi-stage rocket, it’s worth also taking a look at the
other claim the Pyongyang regime has long made for the imminent April 15 birth
centennial of its founding leader, Kim Il-sung: emergence into economic
prosperity.
Originally,
the regime had declared that the country would emerge as “a strong and
prosperous nation” during this time, but with that aspiration far from attainment,
the goal has been relaxed recently to marking the country’s “passage through
the gate” to prosperity. In reality, the North Korean economy today is
characterized by macroeconomic instability, widening inequality and growing
corruption.
No one
(including the North Korean government) knows with any true confidence the size
or growth rate of the country’s economy, but the consensus among outside
observers is that per capita income today is lower than it was 20 years ago,
and by some reckonings is only now re-attaining the level it first achieved in
the 1970s.
Price
data indicate that since a disastrous currency reform in November 2009,
inflation, including for basic goods such as rice and coal, has been running at
well over 100 percent a year. The black market value of the currency has been
falling at a similar rate, meaning that those with access to foreign exchange
are insulated from the ravages of inflation while those reliant on the local
currency have seen their buying power dwindle. Unlike in the past, when grain
prices fell after the harvest – sometimes by quite substantial amounts – prices
have continued to rise this year. Analyses by both the US government and
international groups indicate that there is not enough food to go around, and
some families are going without.
Help
was supposed to be on the way in the form of a resumption of U.S. aid, but the
unraveling of the “Leap Day” food-for-weapons deal in the wake of North Korea’s
announcement of its rocket launch means that conditions for the North’s
chronically food-insecure population may not improve.
This
picture stands in sharp contrast to numerous anecdotal reports of improved
living standards, abundant cell phones, and even traffic jams in Pyongyang,
though it is consistent with the less numerous reports of grim conditions in
provincial cities. My colleague Stephan Haggard has dubbed this phenomenon
“Pyongyang illusion” and believes that it may well go beyond typically observed
urban- or capital-bias in governance, and represents an attempt by an insecure
regime to forestall any Tahrir Square type activity in the capital city.
Macroeconomic
imbalances and shortages have exacerbated the country’s problems with
corruption, already assessed by Transparency International as the worst in the
world. The situation not only represents a drag on growth, but could impair the
regime’s capacity to govern, as the parochial interests of corrupt officials
diverge from the policy preferences of Pyongyang. In the wake of the December
death of leader Kim Jong-il, the state has responded with heightened control
measures, including purging the security units who were supposed to pursue
corrupt officials but who had evidently themselves been corrupted. But there
are limits to the effectiveness of repression when the underlying problems
remain unresolved.
In
short, the country is beset with macro instability, deepening inequality,
rising corruption, and a political leadership that appears to lack the vision
or capacity to respond. Some current policies have allegedly been ascribed to
Kim Jong-il’s “dying wish,” and it would not be surprising if the regime uses
this rationale for some time. But at some point Kim Jong-un and the new
leadership will have to take ownership of policy. That transition could well begin
on the centennial of his revered grandfather’s birth.
Marcus
Noland
Asia
Sentinel
Business & Investment Opportunities
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