Weekend Herald

North Korea — the land of opportunit­y

Some would-be investors are seeing dollar signs in the wake of the Trump-Kim summit meeting

- Photo / AP

Would any corporate executive in his or her right mind be willing to put big money into a centrally planned economic underachie­ver? One that’s best known for food shortages, a backward manufactur­ing sector and woefully inadequate infrastruc­ture?

Maybe a businessma­n whose name adorns buildings in such places as Azerbaijan, Panama, and the Philippine­s.

On June 12, Donald Trump wrapped up a historic summit with Kim Jong Un with a plug for North Korea’s waterfront. “They have great beaches,” America’s realtor-in-chief said at a news conference. “You see that whenever they’re exploding their cannons into the ocean. I said, ‘Boy, look at that view. Wouldn’t that make a great condo?’”

Pristine coastline isn’t North Korea’s only untapped asset. The country boasts vast stores of minerals — including iron and rare earths — which could be worth US$6 trillion, according to a 2013 estimate by the North Korea Resources Institute in Seoul. There are also unconfirme­d reports of oil and gas deposits.

Then there’s North Korea’s working-age population of about 17 million, another potential asset in the eyes of businesses in Japan, South Korea, and China, where labour forces are greying and shrinking. “Northeast Asia could become one of the most exciting places in the world,” says Masaaki Kanno, chief economist at Sony Financial Holdings.

All this bounty has been largely offlimits to foreign companies since

2006, when the United Nations began layering on economic sanctions as punishment for North Korea’s efforts to build a nuclear arsenal. Net inflows of foreign direct investment amounted to just US$93 million in

2016, compared with US$12 billion for South Korea.

To some, North Korea is still the ultimate frontier market, a place with extra-large opportunit­ies — and similarly sized risks. (Mind you, the country has no stock exchange or publicly traded companies, so it’s not designated a frontier market by investment banks.)

“North Korea is now where China was in the 1980s,” says veteran investor Jim Rogers, whose Rogers Holdings doesn’t have investment­s in North Korea. “It’s going to be the most exciting country in the world for the next 20 years. Everything in North Korea is an opportunit­y.”

That may be, but the country is also littered with foreign deals that have gone wrong. Sweden, for instance, is still awaiting payment for 1000 Volvo cars shipped in the 1970s. A Chinese mining company called its four-year venture in the isolated nation a “nightmare”. And an Egyptian telecommun­ications giant doing business there can’t repatriate its profits.

“A major deterrent to foreign investment is the chronic breakdown in the rule of law,” says J.R. Mailey, an investigat­or who has worked on fraud and corruption cases in North Korea.

Surprising­ly, some who’ve butted heads with the regime in Pyongyang remain upbeat about the country’s prospects. Orascom Telecom Media & Technology, an Egyptian company, helped build the North’s communicat­ions networks after entering the country in 2009. But its Koryolink business lost exclusive rights to the market after Kim rose to power in 2011 and financed a rival cellular network.

“The emergence of a state-owned competitor and the strict economic sanctions made our operation much less attractive,” an Orascom spokeswoma­n says. But she adds, “the lifting of sanctions and peace between the two Koreas will improve the overall business climate in the DPRK and will have a positive impact on Koryolink.”

Investors from China, North Korea’s economic patron, have also been burned. Xiyang Group signed a contract in 2007 to set up a venture with the Government to process 500,000 tonnes of iron ore a year. Five years later, Pyongyang terminated the deal and cut off the plant’s water, electricit­y, and communicat­ions. Xiyang issued a terse statement after getting no compensati­on.

Andrei Lankov, a director with Korea Risk Group, which provides clients with informatio­n and analysis on North Korea, sees a pattern in the way companies such as Orascom and Xiyang have been treated. “Once they see foreign businesses get too profitable, the authoritie­s just take a bigger slice,” he says.

Lankov is doubtful that, even if internatio­nal sanctions were lifted, Kim’s regime would lay out the welcome mat for foreign businesses. “Openness would be suicidal for the regime, as it would bring in a flood of informatio­n from outside and could loosen its political control.” He says North Korea would limit internatio­nal companies to joint-venture projects as minority partners.

The bulk of any new investment would probably come from companies south of the border. Conglomera­tes including Hyundai Group, Lotte, and KT have already set up task forces to look into business opportunit­ies in the North. In a recent survey, 96 per cent of the 101 South Korean companies polled expressed interest in returning to Gaeseong, an industrial park in North Korea that was closed in 2016 because of military tensions.

“It took us about two years to break awkward moods and to get along with North Korean workers,” says Shin Han-yong, who runs Shinhan Trading, a maker of fishing nets that operated in Gaeseong.

Still, he’d like to expand his business in North Korea if the complex reopens. Says Shin: “The only thing I can do now is watch Trump’s mouth.”

It’s going to be the most exciting country in the world for the next 20 years. Everything in North Korea is an opportunit­y. Investor Jim Rogers

It took us about two years to break awkward moods and to get along with North Korean workers. Shin Han-yong,

 ??  ?? A policeman directs traffic on a street lined with apartment buildings in Pyongyang, North Korea.
A policeman directs traffic on a street lined with apartment buildings in Pyongyang, North Korea.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand