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North and South Korea: Kim versus the Wisdom of the Market

The contrast between North and South Korea could hardly be starker. According to the 2023 Index of Economic Freedom, the latter ranks as the 15th economically freest country in the world, ahead of the UK (28th) and the United States (25th). North Korea, by comparison, brings up the rear in 176th place.

In July 1961, the Japanese government listed seven reasons why economic independence would be impossible for South Korea: over-population, lack of resources, lack of industrialisation, massive military obligations, lack of political skills, lack of capital, and lack of administrative skills. South Korea’s failure to achieve any meaningful economic progress in the 1950s, immediately after the Korean War, initially appeared to confirm this view. At 79.00 US dollars per annum, South Korea had one of the lowest per-capita incomes in the world.

North Korea’s nominal gross national income in 2022 was estimated to be 1.43 million won (1,116 US dollars) per capita, equivalent to just 3.4 per cent of the South’s 42.49 million won.

In the West, the North Korean leader is the object of fear or ridicule, while North Koreans are convinced that the entire world envies their Supreme Leaders. As the introduction to a biography of Kim Jong-Il has it: “His love is truly great; it cures the sick and brings forth new life, like the spring rain the sacred country drinks … All of this arouses admiration in the peoples of the world, causing them to envy us”.

The cult surrounding North Korea’s leaders is without precedent anywhere else in the world – even Stalin and Mao did not enjoy this level of devotion among their compatriots. The North Korean calendar counts time from the year of Kim Il-Sung’s birth in 1912. Any items Kim Il-Sung ever laid his hands or eyes on are worshipped as sacred relics, with a red plaque or an inscription in gold commemorating this momentous event and more often than not declaring the sacred site or item off limits for ordinary mortals.

That North Korea has such a low standard of living despite its exceptionally large reserves of mineral deposits is primarily due to the political leadership’s insistence on retaining a socialist economic system. North Korea takes great pride in having stayed true to its socialist principles, with only temporary and rather marginal attempts at reform, while China and other former socialist nations have been lured by the ‘temptations’ of capitalism.

Although North Korea’s agricultural sector employs around six times as many people as its South Korean counterpart, the country’s agricultural production barely meets demand – even in good years. When crops fail because of droughts or other natural disasters, food shortages and frequent famines are the result.

The worst of these famines occurred in 1996, when the combined effects of a mismanagement of resources, drought, and flooding left 200,000 North Koreans dead from starvation, according to official figures. The actual death toll is hard to verify – estimates by foreign agencies set the total at up to 3 million, or one in eight North Koreans. Last year, there was once again a severe famine in North Korea, experts believe that the supply situation in North Korea was the worst since the famine in the 1990s.

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