Kim lays blame at officials for N. Korea’s economic failures

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has ripped into the performance of his Cabinet and fired a senior economic official he appointed a month ago, saying they’d failed to come up with new ideas to salvage an economy in decay.
The report by state media on Friday comes during the
toughest period of Kim’s nine-year rule. The diplomacy he had hoped would lift
U.S.-led sanctions over his nuclear program is stalemated, and pandemic border
closures and crop-killing natural disasters last year deepened the damage to an
economy broken by decades of policy failures, including a crippling famine in
the 1990s.
The border closure caused trade volume with China, the
main source of support for North Korea’s economy, to drop by 75% in the first
10 months of the year. Raw materials shortages caused factory output to plunge
to its lowest level since Kim took power in 2011, and prices of imported foods
like sugar quadrupled, according to South Korea’s spy agency.
Some analysts say the current challenges may set up
conditions for an economic perfect storm in the North that destabilizes markets
and triggers public panic and unrest.
The current challenges have forced Kim to publicly
admit that past economic plans hadn’t succeeded. A new five-year plan to
develop the economy was issued during the ruling Workers’ Party congress in
January, but Kim’s comments during the party’s Central Committee meeting that
ended Thursday were rich with frustration over how the plans have been executed
so far.
During Thursday’s session, Kim lamented that the
Cabinet was failing in its role as the key institution managing the economy,
saying it was producing unworkable plans while displaying no “innovative
viewpoint and clear tactics.”
He said the Cabinet’s targets for agricultural
production this year were set unrealistically high, considering limited
supplies of farming materials and other unfavorable conditions. Targets for
electricity production were set too low, he said, showing a lack of urgency
when shortages could stall work at coal mines and other industries.
“The Cabinet failed to play a leading
role in mapping out plans of key economic fields and almost mechanically
brought together the numbers drafted by the ministries,” the KCNA paraphrased
Kim as saying.
The KCNA also said that O Su Yong was named as the new
director of the Central Committee’s Department of Economic Affairs during this
week’s meeting, replacing Kim Tu Il who was appointed in January.
During the January party congress, Kim Jong Un called
for reasserting greater state control over the economy, boosting harvests and
prioritizing the development of chemicals and metal industries. He also vowed
all-out efforts to bolster his nuclear weapons program in comments that were
seen as an attempt to pressure the new Biden administration.
To truly revive the economy, analysts say, the country
needs to invest heavily in modern factory equipment and technology, and to
either import more food or improve farm productivity: a U.N. assessment in 2019
found that 10.1 million people, or 40% of the population, were food insecure
and in urgent need of assistance. The border closure has hindered updates on
the situation, but output of staple grains had plateaued since surging a few
years ago, when farmers were allowed to retain more of their harvests instead
of handing them entirely over to the government.
The U.N. Food and Agricultural Organization estimates
that nearly half of North Koreans are undernourished.
The metal and chemical industries are crucial for
revitalizing stalling manufacturing, which has been decimated by U.N. sanctions
and disrupted imports of factory materials amid the pandemic. However, most
experts agree that North Korea’s new development plans aren’t meaningfully
different from its previous ones that lacked in substance.
South Korean intelligence officials say there are also
signs that the North is taking dramatic steps to strengthen government control
over markets, including suppressing the use of U.S. dollars and other foreign
currencies.
Such efforts might compel people to exchange their
foreign currency savings for the North Korean won. They demonstrate the
government’s sense of urgency over its depleting foreign currency reserves,
analysts say.