Dayton Daily News

North Korea to unveil economic plans

- By Kim Tong-Hyung

SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA — With unusual candor, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un acknowledg­ed his plans to improve the country’s dismal economy aren’t succeeding as his ruling party scheduled a rare congress in January to set developmen­t goals for the next five years.

The Workers’ Party said North Korea’s economy has “not improved in the face of the sustaining severe internal and external situations” — a reference to a triple blow of U.S.-led sanctions, the coronaviru­s pandemic and devastatin­g floods — and that developmen­t goals have been “seriously delayed and the people’s living standard (has) not been improved remarkably.”

Kim announced his first five-year developmen­t plan with goals of improving North Korea’s power supply and agricultur­al and manufactur­ing production during the last Workers’ Party congress in 2016, its first in 36 years.

But at Wednesday’s meeting of the party’s decision-making Central Committee, Kim acknowledg­ed economic “shortcomin­gs” caused by “unexpected and inevitable challenges in various aspects and the situation in the region surroundin­g the Korean Peninsula,” the North’s official Korean Central News Agency reported Thursday.

Experts say the coronaviru­s derailed some of Kim’s major economic goals after North Korea imposed a lockdown that significan­tly reduced trade with China — its major ally and economic lifeline — and likely hampered its ability to mobilize its workforce.

In a closed-door briefing to South Korean lawmakers on Thursday, Seoul’s spy agency said the stress of managing state affairs had caused Kim to recently delegate some of his powers to a select group of senior officials, including his sister Kim Yo Jong, who is now chiefly involved in shaping policies toward Washington and Seoul.

Lawmaker Ha Tae-keung said officials from the National Intelligen­ce Service, which has a mixed track record in reading developmen­ts in North Korea’s secretive ruling elite, insisted that Kim Jong Un’s rule over his country remains absolute. There are no signs that Kim is experienci­ng health problems or is grooming his sister as his successor, Ha paraphrase­d NIS officials as saying.

Kim Byung-kee, another lawmaker who attended the briefing, said the NIS believes North Korea’s foreign currency reserves are being depleting rapidly because of prolonged border controls imposed under its anti-virus campaign which have led to cutbacks in constructi­on and other activities.

The NIS did not confirm the lawmakers’ comments.

 ?? PYONGYANG PRESS CORPS POOL 2018 ?? South Korea’s spy agency says the stress of managing state affairs has caused North Korean leader Kim Jong Un to recently delegate some of his powers to a select group of senior officials, including his sister Kim Yo Jong (right), who is now chiefly involved in shaping policies toward Washington and Seoul.
PYONGYANG PRESS CORPS POOL 2018 South Korea’s spy agency says the stress of managing state affairs has caused North Korean leader Kim Jong Un to recently delegate some of his powers to a select group of senior officials, including his sister Kim Yo Jong (right), who is now chiefly involved in shaping policies toward Washington and Seoul.

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