The Phnom Penh Post

Economy in NK shrank sharply last year: Seoul

-

NORTH Korea saw its economy contract 3.5 percent last year – its worst showing in two decades – as it was hit by sanctions over its weapons programs, the South’s central bank said Friday.

It was a sharp reversal from 3.9 percent growth in 2016, according to the Bank of Korea (BOK).

The UN Security Council last year banned the North’s main exports – coal and other mineral resources, fisheries and textile products – to cut off its access to hard currency in response to Pyongyang’s pursuit of nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles.

As a result the North’s mining industry slumped 11 percent, the BOK said, having grown 8.4 percent in 2016.

Manufactur­ing output fell 6.9 percent – down from 4.8 percent growth – while agricultur­e and fisheries slipped 1.3 percent, after also expanding in 2016.

“Sanctions against the North were much more intense last year,” a BOK official told journalist­s, adding that bad weather was also a factor.

Exports tumbled 37.2 percent to $1.77 billion, while imports inched up 1.8 percent to $3.78 billion.

Inter-Korean trade collapsed 99.7 percent on-year to a mere $900,000 after the South shut down the joint Kaesong industrial complex in the North amid tensions over the North’s nuclear and missile developmen­t.

The North does not publish economic statistics of its own, leaving outside estimates – which by definition are based on limited informatio­n – as the only available figures for its financial performanc­e.

According to the BOK, the North had a per-capita Gross National Income of 1.46 million won ($1,011), while the South’s was 23 times higher.

The North, which holds most of the peninsula’s mine ral resources, was once wealthier than the South, but decades of mismanagem­ent and the demise of its former paymaster the Soviet Union have left it deeply impover- ished and suffering chronic food shortages.

Despite a historic summit with the North’s leader Kim Jong-un in Singapore in June, US President Donald Trump has said sanctions would remain in force until the North takes substantia­l steps toward removing its nuclear arsenal.

“The UN imposed fresh sanctions against the North in August and December, and those will make a serious dent in the North Korean economy this year,” another BOK official said.

“Especially, trade with China which accounts for 95 percent of the North’s overall transactio­ns, fell sharply” in the first half of 2018, he added.

 ?? ED JONES/AFP ?? This photo taken on November 21, 2017, shows a general view of North Korean coal piled up on a dockside at the port in Rason.
ED JONES/AFP This photo taken on November 21, 2017, shows a general view of North Korean coal piled up on a dockside at the port in Rason.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia