Abstract

ABSTRACTThis study is to analyse the changing economic policies of the North Korean government with focus on public markets (Gongseol Sijang) and it covers 20 years from the Kim Jong-il period to the current Kim Jong-un regime. First, as of 2015, public markets in Pyongyang occupy 26 areas from farming districts to vacant lots in the city centre. Second, the North Korean government began to establish farmer’s markets (Nongmin Sijang) in the suburbs of Pyongyang in the 1960s. Songshin Market was the representative farmer’s market. The North Korean government transformed a Songshin Market into a public market in the early 1990s, as a demonstrative case of a public market programme. During the same decade, in the midst of North Korean famine, Songshin Market was expanded and applied to the central area of Pyongyang. Notably, the designs and facilities of the public markets in the central areas have been more modernized and enlarged than in suburban areas because they were built relatively later than those in the suburbs. Third, the central area in Pyongyang was marked as a residential district for high-ranking officers and the rich. Accordingly, the public markets stationed here appeared to be more modernized with a wide variety of products including an abundance of high-end products, due to concentrated buyers with high economic standards. This means that a layering process by economic standards had been proceeding in North Korea. Fourth, government authorities have implemented the policy to expand the city outwards into the suburbs for the expansion of Pyongyang. As a critical means to expand the city, it has also established the public markets near newly constructed apartment complexes in the suburbs of the city. Namely, the construction of the public markets has catalysed the proceeding reconstruction of the city. Regarding the development of these markets, it can be summarized that the North Korean government has conducted gradual economic policies to increase the reform by utilizing the succession of markets in a way with stepwise expansion from dot, line to face in the process of repetitive control and relaxation polices rather than the repetitive or short execution of repression or control.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call