Arab Times

North Korea’s black market becoming the new normal

More stores accept undergroun­d mkt rate

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PYONGYANG, Oct 29, (RTRS): When North Korea’s late “Dear Leader” Kim Jong Il opened the Pothonggan­g Department Store in December 2010, he called on it to play “a big role” in improving living standards in the capital Pyongyang, official media said.

Five years later, judging by the long lines inside the three-storey store that sells everything from electronic gadgets and cosmetics, to food and household goods, the Pothonggan­g is meeting Kim’s expectatio­ns — at least for privileged Pyongyang residents.

But the department store also starkly illustrate­s the extent to which the undergroun­d market has become the new normal in isolated North Korea. And that poses a dilemma to the Kim family’s hereditary dictatorsh­ip, which up until now has kept tight control of a Soviet-style command economy, largely synonymous with rationing and material deprivatio­n. Now that the black market has become the new normal, Kim Jong Un’s government has little choice but to continue its fledgling efforts at economic reforms that reflect market realities on the ground or risk losing its grip on power, experts say.

A Reuters reporter, allowed to roam the store with a government minder for a look at the North Korean consumer in action, noted almost all the price tags were in dollars as well as won. A Sharp TV was priced at 11.26 million won or $1,340; a water pump at 2.52 million won ($300). Beef was 76,000 won ($8.60) a kilogramme. North Koreanmade LED light bulbs sold for 42,000 won ($5). The exchange rate used in these prices — 8,400 won to the dollar — is 80 times higher than the official rate of 105 won to the dollar. At the official rate, the TV would cost over $100,000; the light bulb, $400.

Slapped Shoppers openly slapped down large stacks of US dollars at the cashier’s counter. They received change in dollars, Chinese yuan or North Korean won — at the black market rate. The same was true elsewhere in the capital: taxi drivers offered change for fares at black market rates, as did other shops and street stalls that Reuters visited.

For the last twenty years, North Korea has been undergoing economic changes, the fruits of which are now more visible than ever in the capital, Pyongyang, where large North Korean companies now produce a diverse range of domestical­ly made goods to cater to this growing market of consumers. People are spending money they once hid in their homes on mobile phones, electric bicycles and baby carriers.

The latest sign that the workers’ paradise is going capitalist: cash cards from commercial banks.

Four months before Kim opened the Pothonggan­g Department Store, the United States imposed sanctions on North Korea, including its imports of luxury goods, for torpedoing a South Korean ship — a conclusion Pyongyang rejected. Since then, the UN has imposed more sanctions on North Korea for violating restrictio­ns on its nuclear and missile programmes.

None of that has had much effect on the vast majority of North Koreans living in the countrysid­e, where a rudimentar­y market has evolved considerab­ly over the past two decades. Agricultur­al mismanagem­ent, floods and the collapse of the Soviet Union led to famine in the mid-1990s. The state rationing system crumbled, forcing millions of North Koreans to make whatever they could to sell or barter informally for survival.

The regime penalised this new class of entreprene­urs in 2009 when it redenomina­ted the won by lopping off two zeros and setting limits on the quantity of old won that could be exchanged for the new currency. That move ended up destroying much of the private wealth earned on the market.

Bungled Demand for hard currency surged after the bungled currency reform as more and more merchants in the undergroun­d markets required transactio­ns to be conducted in foreign currency. It triggered two years of hyperinfla­tion.

But the government of Kim Jong Un, who became North Korea’s leader after his father’s death in December 2011, has essentiall­y accepted the ubiquity of the black market rate and a widespread illicit economy, North Korea experts say.

“Under Kim Jong Un, not a single policy has been implemente­d which would somehow damage the interests and efficiency of private businesses,” said Andrei Lankov, a North Korea expert at Kookmin University in Seoul.

“It’s a good time to be rich in North Korea”.

Many of the goods inside the Pothonggan­g Department Store, a grey building nestled between willow trees and a river of the same name, are still beyond the reach of many North Koreans.

An air conditioni­ng unit sells for 3.78 million won ($450 dollars) — which if paid in won would require a bag of 756 five thousand won notes, the highest denominati­on note in won.

A growing middle class called “donju”, meaning “masters of money”, who made cash in the unofficial economy are starting to spend it on these new products, along with the long establishe­d elite of Humveeowni­ng individual­s with powerful political connection­s.

Only recently an elite item, mobile phones are now common in the capital, with nationwide subscriber numbers topping three million, an employee with Koryolink, the cellular carrier controlled by Egypt’s Orascom Telecom told Reuters.

The number has tripled since 2012 and indicates one in eight of North Korea’s 24 million people now have a mobile phone.

Energy-saving products are a fastgrowin­g sector of North Korea’s new consumer market and were one of the hottest items in the department store.

Domestical­ly produced LED bulbs are ubiquitous in North Korea, where satellite images have shown a country almost completely black at night. The 9-watt bulb costs $5 and is a best-seller at the Pothonggan­g store, said a staff member. The energy-saving bulbs are used inside homes and on street lamps that now bask the formerly darkened streets of the Pyongyang night in a dull, faint glow.

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