North Korea's wealth
gap
By John Feffer
Asia Times, 2012. 3. 14
It's not likely that an
Occupy Pyongyang movement will set up tents in Kim Il-sung Square any time soon.
Protest, after all, is virtually non-existent in that society. But the same
widening inequalities that plague the United States and the global economy can
also be found inside North Korea.
What was once a relatively equitable
society, albeit at the low end of per-capita gross domestic product, has been
experiencing a rapid polarization in wealth. The implications of this widening
gap on North Korean government policy - as well as on international policies
promoting human security inside North Korea - are enormous.
The
headlines coming out of North Korea these days are a study in contrasts. on the
one hand, four separate international
nutritional assessments in 2011 found
chronic malnutrition that, according to the United Nations, affects one in three
children under five. Although 2012 is the year of kangsung daeguk - an
economically prosperous and militarily strong power - the overall statistics
tell a different story.
The North Korean economy, which had recovered
somewhat by the begining of the new millennium from its near collapse in the
mid-1990s, contracted in both 2009 and 2010, according to South Korean sources.
Pyongyang has been unable to wean itself from dependence on China's food and
energy assistance, and, out of necessity, has negotiated lopsided deals with
Beijing over access to mineral wealth and ports.
Farmers have been
forced by the lack of fuel and spare parts to rely more heavily on manual labor.
Workers steal from their factories to supplement meager salaries. The inability
of North Korea to revive its agricultural and manufacturing sectors has
adversely affected the larger bulk of the population, the broad class of workers
and farmers who have relied on employment in state enterprises and state farms
as well as food from the public distribution system.
But there is
another set of news stories about North Korea. The number of cell phones in use
in the country, for instance, just recently passed the one million mark - out of
a population of roughly 25 million - only three years after the initial launch
of the 3G network. Private markets have expanded throughout the country, with
two mega-markets that can now serve up to 100,000 people a day.
Someone,
a lot of someones, are using these phones and shopping in these markets. Indeed,
signs of a thriving nouveau riche are everywhere in Pyongyang - fancy pizza
places, more cars on the roads, imported plasma TVs - and there is much talk of
"golden couples", namely a husband in government with an entrepreneur wife.
Even part of the official economy is prospering. The center of the
capital city is busy with new construction, and the enormous, 105-story Ryugyong
hotel is set to open this spring after a 23-year delay, with plenty of space for
offices. The government has put resources into the IT sector, with some notable
achievements in software development, but as in the West, these investments will
not likely produce large-scale employment.
A large part of North Korea,
in other words, has slipped back into the 19th century of manual labor in the
fields and hardscrabble, subsistence living, while a relatively small elite is
living in the 21st century of smart phones and espresso drinks.
Although
such a two-tiered society is not uncommon in the developing world, North Korea
once prided itself on breaking free from this model of stratified development.
True, the regime traditionally maintained a rather complex political hierarchy
based on perceived loyalty to the system, but this neo-Confucian system is
giving way to a more familiar economic class system.
To the two
aforementioned classes must be added a third. The human-rights situation within
North Korea remains abysmal, as an estimated 150,000 people languish in
political prison camps under atrocious conditions. This represents a third class
of people in North Korea: political untouchables.
Any policy toward
North Korea must somehow take into account these three groups of people: the
prospering, the struggling, and the incarcerated. Human-rights groups such as
Amnesty International have devoted much energy to this latter group, using
name-and-shame tactics to shed light on the predicament of those deprived of all
rights.
Humanitarian organizations tend to focus on the lower half of
the middle category, those who have plummeted through what little remains of the
country's social safety net. Development organizations devise projects for the
upper half of the middle category, those who can work in various manufacturing
and agricultural ventures such as goat farms or forestry projects. And the
business community negotiates with its North Korean counterpart, an emerging
entrepreneurial elite.
A human security approach offers one method of
integrating these very different target communities in North Korea by looking at
interlinked strategies that can lift all boats. At the very least, as a recent
conference on the subject at Chatham House in London demonstrated, such an
integrated approach asks the right questions.
Will economic investments
and capacity-building projects that favor the new elite eventually trickle down?
Can emergency humanitarian assistance meet the basic needs of the most
vulnerable so that they can eventually participate in North Korea's new economy?
What engagement strategies can hope to reach the people who barely survive in
facilities far from the eyes of international observers?
Addressing
human security
The concept of human security, promulgated by the United
Nations Development Program in 1994, broadly covers economic, food, health,
environmental, personal, community, and political security.
As
formulated by Lincoln Chen, then at the Center for Population and Development
Studies at Harvard University, "human security can be said to have two main
aspects. It means, first, safety from such chronic threats such as hunger,
disease and repression. Second, it means protection from sudden and hurtful
disruptions in the patterns of daily life - whether in homes, in jobs or in
communities."
The concept was developed further by the Commission on
Human Security, chaired by Sadako Ogata and Amartya Sen, which issued its report
"Human Security Now", in 2003.
A group of North Korea experts,
non-government organizations, policymakers, social entrepreneurs, businessmen
and more gathered at Chatham House in London recently to think through how the
concept of human security could be applied to the DPRK. They pooled their
knowledge of the varied projects currently going on inside North Korea -
teaching English, building "green" houses, creating joint ventures with North
Korean entities - with the objective of combining efforts and reaching more
North Koreans at all levels of society.
The group began by acknowledging
that the name-and-shame approach, however meritorious the intent, has had
limited effect - as far as we know - on improving real existing human rights
inside North Korea. The Chatham House gathering investigated how dialogue and
diverse levels of engagement could eventually achieve the same ends by
addressing a wider set of political, economic, and social issues.
As
participants pointed out, certain strategies take the long view of cultivating
North Korea's political and economic elite in the hopes that this group will
alter government policy from the top and create bottom-up demands for change.
Several organizations, for instance, are currently working to expand
English-language programs that, by their very nature, cater to an academic elite
from grade school through university. In addition to providing a skill that can
foster further engagement with international actors, such a curriculum could
incorporate content on human security as a way to prepare this elite with a
language and a philosophy of human needs that can substitute for an already
discarded Marxist discourse.
North Korea has signed several UN
conventions on human rights, and the existing engagement with international
institutions provides another opportunity for capacity-building, this time with
North Korean officials. The incentive here, as with English-language programs,
is that North Koreans receive a concrete benefit: technical training that can
open the doors to development assistance to targeted communities (such as women,
children, the disabled, and so on).
Other strategies address the middle
category of development. The Kaesong Industrial Complex (KIC), located just
north of the DMZ and run by South Korean firms, now employs more than 50,000
workers. Importantly, these are not just elite workers. Over 80% of the Kaesong
workers possess only a high school degree.
The Fuller Center in the
United States, meanwhile, has embarked
on a project of building sustainable
housing in North Korea, beginning with a model village outside of Pyongyang for
a group of nursery workers. In addition to reducing the country's overall energy
costs if developed throughout the country, the project could immeasurably
improve the living standards of average workers.
Improved farming
practices - crop rotation with "green" manure, low tillage techniques, rice
intensification in paddy fields - could go a long way toward reviving North
Korean agriculture and address the chronic malnutrition that has plagued the
country for much of the last 15 years.
China is heavily invested in
mining operations in North Korea. International organizations could work with
China on promoting best practices related to labor and environment that could
improve the working conditions for North Koreans laboring in what is one of the
most dangerous occupations.
Humanitarian relief, in the short term, can
also help the most vulnerable North Koreans in this middle category by
strengthening food security, the cornerstone of human security. This relief can
also have a multiplier effect if connected with education (distribution of food
in grade school) and infrastructure development (food-for-work programs).
The third category
For much of the last 20 years, individuals
and organizations working on human rights could not get inside North Korea. That
situation has marginally improved. The US Special Envoy for North Korean Human
Rights, Robert King, visited North Korea in May 2011 to assess the food
situation inside the country. Lord Alton and Baroness Cox, two British
parliamentarians who have not hesitated to discuss publically the sad state of
North Korean human rights, have visited the country several times.
"In
every meeting with senior North Korean officials, we talked about the prison
camps and other grave human-rights issues," reports Benedict Rogers, co-founder
of the International Coalition to Stop Crimes Against Humanity in North Korea,
who was part of their 2010 delegation.
Pyongyang's receptivity to such
delegations is not universal. Vitit Muntharbhorn, the first UN Special
Rapporteur on North Korean Human Rights, was never allowed into the country, nor
has his successor Marzuki Darusman managed the trick either.
King and
the British parliamentarians succeeded largely for two reasons. They have
established over the years personal relationships of trust with North Korean
counterparts. And they hold out the prospect of significant benefits that might
accrue from a successful visit - humanitarian aid, commercial investment, and
restarted nuclear negotiations. In exchange, North Korean officials endure the
requisite conversations about human rights, particularly as they relate to the
third category of political untouchables.
So far, neither side has got
what it wants, neither a substantive inquiry into human rights nor a package of
economic assistance. But engagement across political and ideological gulfs,
particularly with North Korea, is not for people with attention deficit
disorder. You're either in it for the long haul or you might as well find other
work.
In the meantime, engagement strategies demonstrably improve the
human security of many North Koreans in the middle category, such as the workers
at the KIC who initially arrived at their jobs visibly malnourished and have
recovered through meals in the cafeteria and consistent salaries.
The
question remains whether the human security approach outlined above can
ultimately reach this third category in a way that formal diplomacy and NGO
advocacy have not.
Those who adopt the elite strategy hope that the next
generation of political leaders will absorb and eventually adopt a mindset
consistent with international standards of human rights. Those who lean toward a
development approach envision a new middle class that reduces the economic
polarities of the society and eventually creates concomitant political demands
that first address the specific interests of the new class and then eventually
extend to all citizens.
And humanitarian organizations aspire to provide
foodstuffs even to those in the political camps, or at least to relieve the
pressure on society at large such that more food is available for the most
marginalized. In theory, an integrated approach can produce a positive feedback
loop in which success with one segment of the population encourages success with
another.
The current trends, however, are not promising. The North
Korean government has worked with rather than against the trend toward greater
inequality. Private markets, investments in the IT sector, joint venture
restaurants and casinos: these changes improve food security for the fittest,
for the rising entrepreneurial elite and the workers and farmers who already
have a leg up. A successful human security approach pushes against such social
Darwinism. It promotes economic development for all North Koreans.
Revolutions are generally not wrought by the wretched but rather by a
rising economic class that demands political power commensurate with its growing
economic clout (or that revolts when economic expectations are not met by the
ruling power). Nevertheless, rising inequality inside North Korea will continue
to erode the regime's legitimacy if the broader swath of the population can only
look on as a small elite plays with its smart phones.
Of course it is
not the job of outside actors, particularly NGOs, to bolster the government's
legitimacy. But to prefer greater inequality on the assumption that it will
hasten regime collapse is as misguided a strategy as the old Marxist desire to
"hasten the contradictions of capitalism" so that the economic system succumbs
all the sooner to revolution.
Capitalism is obviously still around, and
so is the North Korean government. If we care about helping average North
Koreans, we must devise strategies to help them now and not at some unknown
point in the future under some imagined political system.
A human
security approach can only work with the cooperation of the North Korean
government, at all levels. There is no evidence that [new North Korean leader]
Kim Jong Eun encountered the concept of human security during his brief sojourn
in Switzerland. But if he and his current political entourage hope to create
kangsung daeguk in 2012 or after, they would do well to work with outside
actors on an integrated strategy that goes beyond the needs of just the golden
couples of Pyongyang.
John Feffer is the co-director of
Foreign Policy in Focus at the Institute for Policy Studies, writes its regular
World Beat column, and will be publishing a book on Islamophobia with City
Lights Press in 2012. His past essays can be read at his website.
(Posted with permission from Foreign
Policy in Focus. )
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