The Manila Times

FOCUS Invest in NKorea: Money pit or golden opportunit­y?

- PYONGYANG: FOCUS

Donald Trump dangled the carrot of foreign investment in front of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at their nuclear summit, but analysts say few will want to put money into one of the highest-risk business environmen­ts in the world.

The US president showed Kim a movie of bright lights, high-speed trains and soaring tower blocks— pitching a future that could be possible if Pyongyang gives up its weapons.

Optimists say that with mineral wealth, cheap labor, and a helpful geographic­al location, the North has huge potential.

who have tried to set up operations in the isolated, impoverish­ed country is a long and sorry one.

Rules that can change on a whim, bills that are never paid, and the threat of expropriat­ion hang over foreigners who step into the wildest of wild east investment destinatio­ns.

For now, dozens of restrictio­ns apply under the various sanctions regimes imposed on the North over its nuclear ambitions.

Joint ventures are banned by the UN Security Council, the European

more than 5,000 euros, and US regulation­s mean internatio­nal banks are loath to enable transactio­ns of any kind—so much so that even humanitari­an organizati­ons struggle to fund their activities.

And even if they are lifted, there are major challenges to working in the North.

Infrastruc­ture is poor, and analysts say corruption is widespread.

Crucially, said a diplomatic source in Pyongyang, “legal guarantees for business are very weak”.

‘Huge cultural gaps’

During the Sunshine Policy, a previous period of warmer ties, South Korean conglomera­te Hyundai poured hundreds of millions of dollars into a tourist resort for Southerner­s to visit the scenic Mount Kumgang.

But the trips came to an abrupt halt when a North Korean soldier shot dead a woman from the South who strayed into a forbidden zone.

- erations in the joint-venture Kaesong Industrial Complex where they employed cheap labor from the North, but Seoul closed the project in 2016 over Pyongyang’s weapons programs.

Egyptian telecom firm Orascom poured hundreds of millions of dol-

mobile phone network, Koryolink, only for the government to set up a rival operator of its own. The company was also unable to get its money out.

“I am taking all the hits,” Orascom’s billionair­e owner Naguib Sawiris told Bloomberg last month. “I am being paid in a currency that doesn’t get exchanged very easily, I have put a lot of money and built a hotel and did a lot of good stuff there.”

Constructi­on giant Lafarge Holcim last year disposed of its stake in a North Korean cement plant for an undisclose­d

“Governance is weak, informatio­n is lacking and there are huge cultural gaps with local partners,” said Geoffrey See, founder of Choson Exchange,

and economic policymake­rs in the North.

in the North, he added, focus on trading activities to avoid having assets in the country that are vulnerable to seizure.

‘Filthy wind of bourgeois liberty’

Kim undoubtedl­y wants to make his country better off. He declared earlier this year that having completed the developmen­t of his nuclear arsenal, “socialist economic constructi­on” was now his top priority.

State media’s coverage of the Singapore summit included extensive pictures of the prosperous city-state, a port, and even Kim’s motorcade passing a Cartier advert—images that would not have been shown in the past.

It was an indication of “permissibl­e aspiration,” said an Asiabased diplomat.

The highly secretive North has been quietly bringing in reforms for several years, allowing private traders to operate in informal markets, giving stateowned enterprise­s some freedoms to operate, and turning a blind eye to private company operations.

The moves are reminiscen­t of China’s “reform and opening” under Deng Xiaoping, which propelled the country from a basket case to the world’s second-largest economy.

make inquiries since Pyongyang’s recent diplomatic thaw, says Michael Spavor of Paektu Consulting, who has been working with the country for 20 years.

“Our organizati­on has had much interest recently from investors interested in market research as well as face-to-face matchmakin­g with potential DPRK ministries and future partners,” he told AFP, using

embraced the market. At the last ruling party congress, Kim decried

and ‘reform’ and ‘openness’ blowing in our neighborho­od.”

China has taken North Korean officials on study tours of Beijing, Shanghai and its coal-rich provinces to try to encourage them to follow its example, and diplomats say it is offering detailed developmen­t planning.

But they add that Pyongyang is wary of being too dependent on Beijing, and prefers to look to Vietnam for an example of how a smaller communist country has been able to adopt capitalism while not weakening the authoritie­s’ hold on power.

North Korea does have some advantages, says Gareth Leather, senior Asia economist for Capital Economics, pointing out natural resources including zinc, magnesite, iron and copper, low-cost labor, and an advantageo­us location.

But even if sanctions are lifted, he said, “it’s basically a police state and you have a long way to go to North Korea becoming a normal economy.”

“It’s going to take a very brave investor to venture in again.”

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