can ever the resource curse come to North Korea? - Marcus Noland, Andray Abrahamian, and DOng


North Korea’s Resource Headache
By Andray Abrahamian & Geoffrey See , May 1, 2012

(DO –

As Marcus Noland will make a point, to which I also agree, it was not a best choice of framework to see or analyze resource extraction, both current and potential, in the North thru the lens of resource curse.

It is because there is not really correlation, not to mention causation – resource curse by definition should involve correlation between the abundance of oil, gas and mineral resources and low economic growth and human development. The North was or still is said to be on the brink of collapse, lacking its ability to revive its economy and leaving its people starving, well before China looked to the natural resources the North is sitting. More to the point, such extraction will unlikely worsen the desperate food situation.  

In economic terms, the North, the author pointed out, has few of sellable products. Labor will remain cheap without regard to resource extraction.
In political terms, come on.
In social terms, to me, it is interesting. A more marketization will make the country more isolated. Though interesting, the discussion on resource curse does not usually include the issue of social terms.)  
     
(conclusion – the tapping of North Korea’s rich mineral and fossil fuel wealth, retards social change, as opposed to heralding some great reform. This paradox can be analyzed under the framework of resource curse)
North Korea’s moribund economy is one that most observers would like to see marketized and internationalized. This is often considered an end in itself, wherein such transformations would expose the country to irresistible forces of social and political reform. Indeed, there’s evidence that changes in 

(economic causes - Netherland)
The idea of a resource curse was developed in the 1980s, as economists noted that countries, particularly post-colonial ones, with large reserves of natural resources were often not developing as successfully as they potentially could. Sometimes, problems stem from economic causes, such as those faced by the Netherlands in the 1960s and ’70s, after huge reserves of natural gas were discovered in the North Sea. The export of this fossil fuel put tremendous strains on the economy’s manufactured goods, by driving up the exchange rate and making exports more expensive. Furthermore, human resources are drawn away from export-oriented industries, further eroding the competitiveness of the manufacturing sector. These economic pressures came to be known as “Dutch disease.”

(political causes- Nigeria)  
There are also political consequences associated with a resource boom. When there’s a lack of manufacturing to begin with, a country’s elites are incentivized to fight for control over the resource base, rather than producing wealth by other means. It’s easier for them to distribute resource wealth to secure their own positions and enrich their political alliesNigeria is an oft-cited example of this.

(going around resource curse – Norway)
Both the economic and political pressures brought by control of a valuable resource can be mitigated in a variety of ways, including good governance through strong institutions. Norway is an example, with its oil revenues parked in a sovereign wealth fund, which is only allowed to invest overseas. This prevents pork-barrel spending and limits the inflationary impact of resources.  Distribution of oil wealth is also heavily regulated.

(N. Korea is resource rich country, though no detailed info available about how rich it is)
North Korea, by all accounts, is rich in valuable natural resources, particularly coal, iron ore, gold ore, zinc ore, copper ore, limestone and graphite. North Korea is a statistics abyss, however, leaving a lot of guesswork for economists who keep an eye on the country. South Korea’s estimates put the North’s mineral resources figure at over $6 trillion.           

(Pyongyang boost efforts to bring in foreign investments)
There’s growing interest in exploiting these resources for export through joint ventures. There are more trade fairs in Pyongyang than ever before, and last autumn, Rason became the first city outside of the capital to host an international trade fair. North Korean investment officers we have worked with on economics and business training have been incredibly busy sending delegations out on investment roadshows, and two major organizations were set up in the last two years to bring in investments.

(Most of that foreign investment is Chinese; China’s ever-greater ownership of North Korean resources )
Most of that foreign investment is Chinese, of course, and Chinese companies have redoubled their focus on securing North Korea’s underground wealth over the last several years. For those willing and able to navigate a very trying business environment, the combination of cheap labor and accessible resources can potentially pay large dividends.

According to KOTRA, China’s trade with North Korea has tripled since 2005. Recent data suggests North Korea’s trade deficit with China has improved on the back of natural resources: A joint Yonhap-IBK Economic Research Institute study concluded that China imported 8.42 million tons of minerals from North Korea from January to September last year, worth $852 million. This was triple the amount imported during the same period of 2010.

(the North and the South, both are aware of China’s ever-greater ownership of North Korean resources, currently having no way out of it)
Some North Koreans have expressed wariness over the country’s increasing dependence on China. Nevertheless, since North Korea is unable to revive its transportation network, energy supplies, or manufacturing base on its own, the country appears to have little choice. Seoul, incidentally, is also concerned about China’s ever-greater ownership of North Korean resources, but not enough to overcome internal divisions over approaches to North Korea

(to reduce reliance on China, Pyongyang gives much authority to investment agencies to help reach out foreign capital)  
The new leadership recognizes that it can’t rely forever on exhortations to sacrifice for the stake of security and must find a way to deliver economic results. This requires foreign currency, and therefore sellable products, of which North Korea has few. North Korea’s growing interest in exploiting resources through joint ventures can be seen in the radically increased authority that investment agencies have been endowed with compared to their predecessors 3 to 4 years ago, as well as in the investment pitches they’ve made to investors abroad.

(ineffective, inefficient, and self-defeating internal competition for foreign investment)
New investment laws, whether well-drafted or not, and public pronouncements in favor of investments, whether supported by effective actions or not, make clear the government’s intentions. Over the last few years there have been multiple organizations competing for investments, suggesting a certain degree of competition at the apex of North Korean society. Cross-agency communication is notoriously bad in North Korea. Indeed, part of the country’s philosophy of centralized rule means that organizations share information upward, while remaining stovepiped from parallel organizations. Different investment agencies appear to have had different patrons and belong to different patronage networks. North Korean government officials have described the competition for investments as “intense.”

As many agencies take a cut of the investments they bring in, the blurred lines between profit-seeking and regulatory responsibilities, combined with some degree of competition with rival organizations, means that a development strategy based on foreign investments could degenerate into rent-seeking by rival patronage networks if the process is managed poorly.

(the two main agencies dealing with investment)
Recent reports from North Korea indicate that the two main agencies dealing with investment are in greater contact with each other. The Joint Venture and Investment Committee and the Daepung Investment Group operate under new investment laws passed in 2010 and amended in January this year. These laws are North Korea’s attempt to clarify the legal status of joint ventures along the lines of China’s own investment laws. Unifying competing institutions and revising legal codes are both positive signs.

(a lack of rule of law, property rights, transparency; commercial activities take place outside of the legal framework)
However, it remains to be seen how the relationship between JVIC and Daepung will develop. Discussions with North Koreans indicate that understanding of the rule of law and property rights remains weak, that transparency is a major issue, and that much commercial activity takes place outside of the legal framework put down on paper. This exposes business people without the right connections and backing to arbitrary penalties.    
   
(North Korea will struggle to avoid the trap, both in economic and political terms)
If managing resources and overcoming the so-called curse is a matter of concerted, institutional commitment and the corresponding development of effective economic institutions, North Korea will struggle to avoid the trap, both in economic and political terms. Pyongyang will increase trade and exports, but resources could go to supporting different – sometimes overlapping, sometimes competing – groups of elites. The issues with rule of law and competition at the top of society, combined with large payouts from mining joint ventures, could actually lead to a “resource-driven equilibrium.” Marketization without good governance could result in a stagnant and isolated economy, much like Burma over the last decade, as broad-based economic development is ignored while a narrow elite is enriched and existing power structures are strengthened by resource wealth.

We use the term marketization to mean both the reduction of controls over State-Owned Enterprises as well as a relaxation of restrictions on smaller business people or the informal markets. The commanding heights of the economy will be firmly in control of various groups of elites. Lower down, trade and market activity might be tolerated. Yet at the same time, the additional wealth at the top can be invested in apparatuses of control. While living standards will improve marginally, Burma’s situation over the past decade shows that this isn’t enough to sustain broad-base economic development.

(the third causes – in social terms.  Resource extraction involving a more marketized economy would leave the country more isolated)  
North Korea’s system has shown resilience to the encroachment of unofficial sources of news and information that have been growing since the mid-1990s. A more marketized economy with greater engagement with the outside world may allow more outside information in, yet paradoxically serve to bolster, rather than erode, this resilience. We might see a more internationally engaged economy, but one that’s still harnessed to maintain the social and political structures essentially as they are.

That marketization will naturally lead to other positive social and political changes in North Korea is too often assumed, and not questioned enough. Natural resources will provide more income for North Koreans. Nonetheless, we need to be prepared for the possibility that resource-fueled growth can lead to equilibrium where the economy is marketized, broader economic development remains a pipedream, and existing political structures that dominate North Korean society today are reinforced.

Andray Abrahamian is an Executive Director at Choson Exchange (www.chosonexchange.org), a Singapore-based non-profit focused on economics, business and legal knowledge exchange with North Koreans, and a lecturer at the University of Ulsan. Geoffrey See is a Managing Director of Choson Exchange.


The Resource Curse Comes to North Korea
by Marcus Noland           | May 17th, 2012

Roughly once every few months some news story or report crosses my desk touting the value of North Korea’s mineral deposits.  Back in 2009, the Swiss firm Quintermina stated that the country had the world’s second largest reserves of magnesite.  A Goldman Sachs report put the sub-soil riches in at $6trillion. Earlier this month it was the Choson Sinbo, perhaps not the most unbiased of sources, flogging North Korea’s mineral deposits.  Kim Jong-un got into the act, recently warning against “developing underground resources at random or creating disorder in their development.” And where mineral riches go, the resource curse is soon to follow. Andray Abrahamian and Geoffrey See should be credited with penning the first piece predicting its imminent arrival in North Korea.

I am tempted to dismiss all of this with “they wish.”  You see, to have a resource curse, well, you actually need commercially extractable resources, and while North Korea no doubt has a lot of resources in the ground, actual production has lagged.

So what exactly is the resource curse? In the 1950s, Argentinean economist Raul Prebisch argued that commodities were subject to a long-term secular decline in their terms of trade relative to manufactures. Post-colonial resource producers would be consigned to be the “hewers of wood and drawers of water” for the rich industrialized countries. Whether this hypothesis is correct is an empirical matter, and a quick glance at the gas pump, much less advanced statistical analysis, suggests that it probably is not.  Another possibility is that it is not the secular trend in prices that counts, it is the instability of export revenues that is the culprit, discouraging saving and investment, complicating macroeconomic policy management and generally encouraging a boom-bust mentality. Again, the statistical support for the proposition has been found wanting. Yet another possibility is the so-called the “Dutch disease” phenomenon. Named for the discovery of natural gas in the North Sea off the coast of the Netherlands in the 1970s, Dutch disease refers to the tendency of the real exchange rate to appreciate following the discovery of a valuable commodity or during commodity price booms rendering traditional industries internationally uncompetitive.  While Dutch disease complicates exchange rate management, it is unlikely to represent the whole explanation for the underperformance of commodity exporters, it is probably not the primary channel through which natural resource abundance could negatively affect economic performance. Rather, the primary channel through which resource endowments affect economic performance is through its impact on institutions and political development.

Resource producers tend to be undemocratic, though plenty of exceptions exist—Canada, Norway, and Botswana, just to name a few. In resource-abundant rentier states, the positive effect of high incomes on personal well-being has to be set against potentially destabilizing concerns about distribution: the absence of any transcendently rational or objective ground for determining who receives a share of the rents could potentially manifest itself in dissatisfaction. Authoritarianism may emerge as an understandable, though regrettable, response of a political leadership confronting a potentially aggrieved populace. The existence of rents can act as an emollient through multiple channels. The existence of rents may absolve governments from taxation and as a consequence relieve pressure for accountability. Rents may also furnish governments with revenues for patronage, often taking the form of generous public-sector employment. More subtly, commodity-derived rents can enable governments to co-opt social space, in effect creating oxymoronic state-sponsored non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and undercutting the formation of social groups genuinely autonomous of the state. A third channel through which rents may impede democracy would be by financing the development and maintenance of institutions of internal repression.

Symbiotically, the existence of commodity-derived rents increases the value of control of the state and intensifies incentives to contest political power. In the extreme, control of the resources themselves may fuel rebellion or prolong violent civil conflict, the most obvious examples being alluvial “conflict” or “blood” diamonds in the horrific civil wars of Sierra Leone and Liberia. More recently trade in “conflict minerals” such as tin, tantalite, tungsten, and gold, have been used to fund armed conflict in the Eastern Congo and surrounding regions. And while most contemporary examples of this phenomenon are found in sub-Saharan Africa, the problem is not limited to this region: it is claimed that illicit emerald mining, for instance, has helped finance the long insurgency in Colombia. Burma is another example.

So what does all of this mean for North Korea, at least potentially? It’s got plenty of problems with governance even without a resource windfall. The conventional wisdom is if a country has “good institutions” (e.g. Canada, Norway) when the resource riches begin rolling in, then the country can manage the windfall politically.  But if a country has weak or corrupt institutions, then the influx of resource wealth may actually worsen the situation socially and politically. Richard Pomfret has written an interesting paper on these issues as they relate to the countries of Central Asia, which with their Soviet legacies, may approximate North Korea in certain ways.  Those are not auspicious examples as Pomfret documents and the citizens of those countries can attest

one example of what I would call "weekly round up of N. Korea news"

the week of May 21

Tension Escalated over Alleged Imminent Nuclear Test 

The failed rocket launch on April 13 raised the question of whether Kim Jong-un and his military would be tempted to recover by staging a larger provocation, such as a new nuclear test. The recent commercial satellite imagery of the Punggye-ri Nuclear Test facility supported the contention that preparations were continuing as if the test go-ahead decision had already been made. Another commercial satellite photography revealed that work on the experimental light water reactor at Yongbyon resumed after months of inactivity.   

Senior American, Japanese and South Korean diplomats held talks in Seoul to address concerns over potential provocations from the North. In the first meeting since the failed launch, they warned that the North would face swift and sure reaction if it conducted a nuclear test.  

Pyongyang, however, ruled out an imminent nuclear weapon test, but vowed to expand its nuclear deterrence as well as its sovereign right to launch satellites. In the same statement, it also threatened to take "countermeasures for self-defense" if the U.S. kept up hostile acts. In furtherance of its plan to launch satellite, it is reportedly preparing for a second launch of “Unha-3” -- the failed long-range rocket -- again at the Tongchang-ri launch pad. It is also upgrading the Musudan-ri launch site to handle larger rockets including space launch vehicles and intercontinental missiles. Other nations are worried such rockets could be developed to deliver nuclear weapons.   

Regardless, assuming that Pyongyang is ‘technically ready’ to conduct a third nuclear test and believing it may soon set off a nuclear device, Seoul warned North Korea of "grave consequences" and new international sanctions if the North goes ahead with a nuclear test.

In the meanwhile, the U.S. remains open to diplomatic solution. The top U.S. envoy for North Korea, Glyn Davies, said that Washington had no clues so far regarding whether North Korea would take further provocative actions. (“I don’t have any particular … judgment … whether … they will engage in another provocation”) While warning that a nuclear test would be ‘highly provocative,’ Washington will consider offering food aid to Pyongyang if it reverses its missile and nuclear weapons programs – a gesture to pursue talks, rather than confrontation.

when phased reunification is no longer practicable, what viable option is on S. Korea's table? le


Why Phased Reunification Is Impossible
By Andrei Lankov, Professor, Kookmin University,  2012-05-25

= = == = = =
DO
If North Korea gov. is were to increase exchanges with S. Korea, Kim’s regime will face the demand for accountability for the actions of previous leaders and current one, as an increasing number of North Koreans are exposed to outside information – the transformation into being “citizen.” Thus, the regime will not walk the path of phased reunification.  

That makes sense. The will be more risk, including external security concerns.

The solution – the only feasible option – is to embrace the leadership by granting them immunity. Then, they will see the reunification as a way out of the mess.

The most important factor is the level of willingness or commitment of S. Korean toward reunification, wherever it comes from – practicality, humanitarianism, egalitarianism, or a sense of same ethnicity (brethren).
= = = = = = = = = = = =    

At some point, the North Korean people are going to see South Korea as the absolute benchmark for its standard of living, given that it is a country inhabited by fellow Koreans and which it may eventually unify with under one flag. If North Korea does not begin to see the same standard of living as is enjoyed in the South, people will quickly begin to regard themselves as poor. Accordingly, if the regime cannot deliver progress which suggests a quick upswing toward such standards of living, it may take just as little time for that public displeasure to turn its attention on the regime itself.

The majority of North Korean citizens will always see the Kim Jong Eun system as a descendant of the Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il reigns, times which presided over economic collapse, food shortages, political crimes and human rights abuses, so even if the current government were to strike a compromise with South Korea, the public would demand accountability for the actions of previous rulers. Preparations for gradual unification would necessitate a spike in inter-Korean exchanges and contacts, however the prospect of bearing responsibility for the legacy it has been left with is a serious threat for the current regime to consider, and one that no doubt plays on its mind a fair bit.

On the other hand, if the regime were to simply pursue exchanges with the South while continuing its Orwellian policy of state surveillance then it might be somewhat easier to maintain its authority. That level of supervision would be impossible to carry out on the same scale employed by Kim Jong Il though, considering the number of skilled workers and businesspeople who would be routinely visiting North Korea for work, and evidence of government corruption and human rights abuses would be exposed for the world to see on a much grander scale than they are now.

Many people are aware of the reality in North Korea and are under no misconceptions about the character of the regime. It is worth remembering though that many others have never seen the videos, leaked official documents and other materials which prove the human rights abuses of the Kim Dynasty, and that others still sympathize with the regime under some mistaken belief that the human rights situation has been exaggerated.

With that in mind, increasing the level of exchanges between North and South Korea would provide a platform by which to uncover documentary evidence about the regime’s activities which would be impossible to cast doubt over. We already know that people who are accused of damaging portraits of Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il are severely punished. However, if for example the real names of people who had been punished for such offenses (up to 10 years in some cases) or official documents concerning their cases were made public to the outside world, the effects of this would be enormous. It would be difficult for both sides of politics to ignore in South Korea, conservatives and left-wingers alike; the latter of which, it should be said, have a tendency to overlook the faults of the regime.

In the end, the more North Korea opens itself up to exchange with South Korea, the more it is going to face pressure from the South to improve its human rights situation. If the North Korean elite yielded to that pressure and eased the policy of suppression it would become harder to maintain internal stability and order. Like it or not, therefore, South Korea’s amazing tale of economic growth and democratic progress is a perceived threat to North Korea, and with that being the case, economic aid from South Korea can be no fix-all; long-term survival for the regime is only possible by continuing a policy of national isolation, controlling information and the politics of terror.

Those who have ultimate authority over the direction of policy in North Korea are well aware of the above facts. The way they see it, holding summit talks aimed at phased unification would be mass political suicide, so while the idea of unification through gradual talks looks an attractive proposition on the surface, it is nothing more than an impractical illusion. The only scenario that can truly bring about unification is change from within North Korea.

I feel I should point out that I am in favor of the individuals and groups who work tirelessly to facilitate inter-Korean exchanges and contacts in the hope that one day unification will become a possibility. The efforts of such people go a long way in spreading knowledge about life outside North Korea, and give a chance for the nation’s people, including low- and mid-level bureaucrats, to see South Korea as it truly is.

Irrespective of any subjective motivation, those efforts do weaken the authority of the North Korean dictatorship and help increase the influence of the only people who can truly bring about the change required for Korean unification.

Kim Jong-il is smart - Secretary Albright


Ex-US Secretary of State Albright recounts talk with late NK leader
Kim Se-jeong , May 15, 2012 Tuesday,  Korea Times

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DO- Harold Koh provide similar accounts about Kim Jong-il in a speech 

===========

The late North Korean leader Kim Jong-il, who died last December, acknowledged the importance of U.S. troops on the Korean Peninsula, said former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright.

She has shared her experience of meeting the deceased leader on several occasions, most recently at a talk organized by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs early this month, according to diplomatic sources.

Secretary Albright and Kim discussed military affairs and ways of improving relations between the two states during a visit to Pyongyang in October 2000.

"Our intelligence was not exactly correct. They said he was crazy and a pervert. He was not crazy,' she said, recalling their talks. 'I think he was very smart."

'(We) discussed the full range of concerns on missiles,' said Albright. 'He was really quite open, in discussions that we had, in terms of limiting his missile program, and it was very evident what he wanted to do was to be involved in a negotiation,' she told Frontline, PBS.

North Korean rocket launches have been regarded as tests for long-range missiles. Most recently, Pyongyang attempted and failed to launch an Unha-3 rocket from a West Sea satellite launch site in April.

Regarding U.S. troops stationed here, Albright said, 'Kim accepted the fact that the United States will continue to station its troops in Korea.'

Kim had been adamant about a need for the United States Forces in Korea's (USFK) 'full withdrawal' up until Albright's.

Albright had worn heels and a brooch shaped like the American flag for their meeting. Recounting Kim's appearance, Albright added, 'His heels were the same height as mine and his hair was a lot poofier than mine.'

Albright was the highest ranking American official ever to meet with Kim Jong-il.

'North Korea is one of the most dangerous flashpoints,' said Albright. 'The country seems very unstable at the moment, and there is concern it will perform nuclear tests.'

'It would be best if China takes the role of negotiator during the six-party talks,' she added.

The six-party talks are a series of discussions between South Korea, Russia, United States, Japan, North Korea and China to seek a peaceful resolution on the North Korean nuclear weapons program. They started on Aug. 27, 2003

Jeremy Rifkin: Creating a New Economic Paradigm (Ceres Conference 2012)


Dear Friends,

Recently I had the pleasure of presenting a keynote lecture at the Ceres Conference in Boston, MA. Please see the link below to view my talk: 

Jeremy Rifkin, author and president at the Foundation on Economic Trends delivered an insightful talk about our economic and environmental future and what he calls, the Third Industrial Revolution. Rifkin spoke at the annual Ceres Conference held April…

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북한 사회 변화시킬 '장마당 세대'


[기고] 북한 사회 변화시킬 '장마당 세대'
안드레이 란코프 국민대 교수·북한학 , 2012.05.25

이달 초순 북한 언론 환경을 조사한 미국 연구 단체 인터미디어가 발간한 보고서는 국제적인 관심을 끌었다. '조용한 개방'이라는 보고서 제목이 보여주듯 북한 내에서 외국 방송과 DVD 등의 확산 덕분에 해외생활에 대한 지식이 퍼지고 있다고 한다. 이것은 놀라운 소식이 아니다. 북한에는 개혁과 개방이 없다. 그렇게 개혁과 개방을 치명적인 위험으로 삼는 엘리트 계층의 노력에도 북한은 바뀌고 있다. 북한 청년들은 이 변화 속도가 가장 빠르다. 이것이야말로 북한에서 미래를 결정할 요소가 될 수도 있다.

북한에서 '배급 세대' '장마당 세대'로 교체되기 시작한 것은 10여년 전부터다. '장마당 세대'1980년대 초 이후 태어난 사람들이다. 그들의 인생 경험과 가치관은 김일성 시대에 자라난 그들의 부모와 너무나 다르다. 그들의 부모는 국가가 절대적으로 지배했던 사회에서 자랐다. 30세 이상 북한 주민 대부분은 국가가 시키는 일을 하고 (i) 정해진 배급을 받고 사는 것을 자연스럽게 여겨왔다. 그들은 (ii) 해외 생활을 잘 모르고 북한을 '지상 낙원'으로 묘사하는 어용 언론의 주장을 그대로 믿었다. 그리고 1960년대 숙청의 기억이 남아있기 때문에 (iii) 보위부나 보안부 같은 보안 기관에 대한 공포가 너무 심해서 정치 노선이나 정권에 대한 불만을 표시할 생각조차 할 수 없었다.

그러나 1990년대의 경제 위기와 기근, 배급제의 몰락 등은 북한 사회의 모습을 완전히 바꾸었다. 이 새로운 세상에서 자라난 사람들은 다를 수밖에 없다. 30세 미만 북한 주민들은 (i) 배급을 받은 경험이 거의 없다. 국가에 아무것도 기대하지 않고 자기 힘으로 생존해야 한다는 것은 그들의 상식이다. 그들은 배급을 중심으로 하는 스탈린주의 경제와는 선을 그어놓고 있다.

'장마당 세대'는 권력기관에 대한 공포가 상대적으로 적다. 1990년대 이후의 북한에서 국가는 예전보다 덜 억압적인 성격을 띠게 됐다. 부정부패의 폭발적인 증가 때문에 법이나 규칙을 위반한 사람도 돈만 있으면 벌을 피하기 어렵지 않게 되었고, 국가 역시 정치범을 이전보다 관대하게 다루는 경향을 보였다. 김일성 시대에서 정치 사건이 나면 주범뿐 아니라 가족 전체까지 수용소로 들어갔지만 요즘에는 가족이 중벌을 받지 않을 수도 있다. (iii) 부정부패 때문이든 국가가 관대하기 때문이든 결국 북한 청년들은 보위부나 노동당을 덜 무서워한다.

'장마당 세대'는 해외 생활에 대해서 잘 안다. 세뇌 교육이나 공포 때문에 외국 방송 청취나 외국 영화 관람을 피했던 '배급 세대'와 달리 지금의 북한 청년들은 남한과 해외 영화를 재미있게 본다. 또 그들은 중국을 방문하는 북한 사람들 이야기를 많이 들을 뿐 아니라 친구와 가족들에게 이를 전해준다. 그들은 (ii) 중국의 경제적 성공에 대해 알고 남한이 잘사는 나라임을 짐작한다.

이런 세대교체는 1970~80년대 구소련의 세대교체와 너무나 유사하다. 소련에서도 1953년 스탈린 사망 이후 자란 사람들은 권력기관을 덜 무서워하고 해외 생활을 더 잘 알게 됐으며, 사회주의 체제의 우월성에 대한 의심도 갈수록 심각해졌다. 그 사람들이 1980년대에 소련 사회의 엘리트가 되자 정치와 사회 제도가 바뀌었다. 북한에서도 '장마당 세대'가 시대착오적인 제도를 바꾸고 경제성장과 정치적 자유화를 가져올 세력으로 등장할 수 있지 않을까 싶다

America the exception: 7 other treaties the U.S. hasn't ratified


America the exception: 7 other treaties the U.S. hasn't ratified
Posted By Joshua Keating   Thursday, May 17, 2012

(DO- Korea is partly responsible for the “absence.” The U.S. is not in a good position to ratify Mine Ban Treaty, because of DMZ b/w two Koreas.
To me, the reason of the absence in the CRC is, rather than sovereignty concern, the increasing dominance of conservative values among American politicians. I doubt that CRC is so intrusive that RUD can’t protect the sovereignty of the US from the treaty regime. Take a look at the RUDs submitted by the US to ICCPR. They basically say “The U.S. will comply with ICCPR to the extent that the U.S. Constitution allows.”
When Hillary Clinton expressed her support for CRC, commentators from the conservative said, “She let kids sue their children.” Any qualitative difference from Limbaugh calling slut to Ms. Fluke arguing that birth control should be covered by health insurance? )     

The Obama administration, this month, decided to take up the fairly unrewarding task of pushing for the ratification of the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea. In a piece for FP today, James Kraska explains why ratification is long overdue. The treaty, which lays out rules for both military use of the seas and extraction of resources, went into effect in 1994, has been accepted by 161 nations, and was supported by both the Clinton and Bush administrations as well as U.S. Naval commanders. However it will still face a tough fight in Congress where many lawmakers feel it would constitute an unwarranted intrusion on U.S. sovereignty. 
But the Law of the Sea is hardly the only major international agreement waiting for either a U.S. signature, or for Congress to approve ratification. Here's a quick look at a few of the other international treaties and conventions where the United Statates is conspicuous by its absence:

Entered into force in 1990, signed by U.S. in 1995
Number of states parties: 193 (Fellow non-ratifiers: Somalia, South Sudan*)

Signed by U.S. in 1980, entered into force in 1981
Number of states parties: 187 (Fellow non-ratifiers: Palau, Iran, Somalia, Sudan, South Sudan, Tonga) 

Entered into force in 1999, never signed by U.S.
Number of states parties:159

Entered into force in 2008, signed by U.S. in 2009.
Number of states parties: 112

Entered into force in 2010, never signed by U.S.
States parties: 71

Entered into force in 2006, never signed by U.S.
Number of states parties: 63

Entered into force in 2010, never signed by U.S.
Number of states parties: 32 (91 have signed)

One could, of course, make the case that the fact that countries like Iran, North Korea, and Belarus have ratified many of these treaties suggests they don't actually accomplish very much. On the other hand, it doesn't look very good that the United States is considered a likely no vote when it comes to new human rights treaties, and at this point there's enough evidence from other states parties to suggest that ratifying an agreement on say, the rights of children, won't lead to U.N. bureaucrats telling parents how to raise their kids. 

*In fairness to South Sudan, it has only been a country for about 10 months.

The Issues of Contention in Interpreting and Implementing Section 1504 of Dodd-Frank Act



SEC schedules vote on transparency rules
Tue, 2012-07-03 14:47

After more than a year of delays, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced this Monday that a vote will be held on August 22 to adopt final rules for Section 1504 of the Dodd-Frank Act.

When the Dodd-Frank Act was enacted in July, 2010, Congress gave the SEC 270 days to issue rules for Section 1504.  Those rules are now more than one year overdue; in May, ERI filed a lawsuit on behalf of Oxfam America -- a key backer of Section 1504 -- to compel the SEC to promptly finalize the rules.  

While this is the first time the SEC has actually scheduled a date for a vote, it has repeatedly published -- and missed -- self-imposed deadlines to finalize the rules. While we hope the vote will proceed as scheduled next month, our lawsuit on behalf of Oxfam will continue until a rule is actually adopted.

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https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Z2QD2UVcek0c_QWwHSQxjSZ50nUg-zSb0ZaJvs9SVcw/edit
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The Contentious Issues in Section 1504
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Tony Hall shamed Obama administration: It is wrong to use starving children as a policy tool


Tony Hall and the NSC on North Korea, Starvation, Food Aid, and the United States
by Stephan Haggard and Marcus Noland     | May 24th, 2012

Former Congressman Tony Hall had a notable career as a legislator and activist on behalf of the world’s poor, and we have to confess, he has shamed us more than a bit. For those who don’t know about Hall, he served as a representative for Dayton for 24 years, and took a particular interest in world hunger. He was chairman of the Select Committee on Hunger from 1989 to 1993 and fasted for 22 days in protest when it was abolished. He subsequently succeeded George McGovern as United States Ambassador to the United Nations Agencies for Food and Agriculture, which included the job of representing the US with respect to the World Food Program.  His travels took him to some of the world’s most destitute locations, including seven trips to North Korea.

So why has he shamed us? We have argued in some detail that the food problem in North Korea remains real. But when the February 29 agreement broke down as a result of the missile test, we knew full well that food aid—which had effectively been linked to the agreement despite all denials to the contrary—was dead. But of course the fact that this deal had collapsed had absolutely nothing to do with the situation on the ground in North Korea one way or the other; to the contrary, it was likely to make things worse and it is important to say so. Hall has, and is worth reading. We reproduce the piece in its entirety below.

But before we do, one illuminating aspect of Hall’s piece is something we had missed: a truly extraordinary statement by National Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor emailed to reporters that ” … (M)illions of innocent people are starving to death because the regime spends all its money on weapons.” It goes without saying that North Korea is remarkably opaque, and reasonable people can have serious disagreements about the basic facts. But if this statement “millions are starving”—not potentially starving, not “food insecure”—but “millions are starving” right now, present tense, is true, then it is very big news.  And if it is not true, why is the NSC spokesman of all people making such wild claims?

Dayton Daily News (Ohio)

May 11, 2012 Friday

IDEAS & VOICES; Pg. A9

847 words

White House wrong to link kids’ food to nukes.

For the first time that I know, the United States has taken the public position that withholding food aid to innocent starving people is a legitimate policy tool. The White House made it clear that it would not provide nutritional assistance to starving children in North Korea because their government launched a rocket in violation of United Nations sanctions.

It is wrong to use starving children as a policy tool.

It is no secret that the North Korean regime has misguided priorities. The long history of human rights abuses, political gulags and broken promises towards denuclearization are widely known – and rightly criticized.

Likewise, it is well known the people of North Korea are underfed, malnourished and starving. We know they are powerless within their own country. For them to publicly assign blame, or advocate for change, will result in their own personal imprisonment as well as the arrest and imprisonment of up to three generations of their family.

It is because the people are innocent, powerless and starving that we choose to feed them, despite their government.

More than one year ago, a group of American relief agencies – among them Mercy Corps, World Vision and Samaritan’s Purse – reported that there was a growing problem of severe malnutrition in the country and children were starting to die. That report was the result of a direct request by USAID (United States Agency for International Development) to verify whether there was a real need. During the next few months, three U.N. agencies, the European community and even a team of U.S. State Department and USAID officials verified first-hand that, indeed, there was widespread, chronic and growing malnutrition in North Korea.

According to Ambassador Steven Bosworth (the former Obama administration official responsible for North Korea), it has been known since last May that a food program was “very appropriate for children.”

Despite the evidence, the White House delayed action on responding to the requests for many months and gave misleading statements to the press and public that they were analyzing those reports.  It was revealed through the “Leap Day Agreement,” however, that the administration used the growing needs of hungry children to leverage a political deal on uranium enrichment and missile tests.

Did the White House or State Department seriously think that tying the humanitarian needs of children to a policy of Korean denuclearization was in the interest of anyone, least of all the hungry kids?

National Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor squarely laid the blame on the North Koreans for putting missile tests ahead of hungry children in his recent emailed statement to reporters: ” … (M)illions of innocent people are starving to death because the regime spends all its money on weapons.”

It is deeply concerning that the U.S. government recognizes that there are millions of innocent people starving to death, but is withholding food aid because of its own policy of making food aid conditional on the actions of a tyrannical regime.

Further, it is disingenuous for the administration to claim that there are no guarantees that donated food would reach the targeted beneficiaries if a program did go forward. Food currently donated to the World Food Program by the Europeans, Australians and others is absolutely reaching the hungry. There are no doubts about the food currently going in; the only problem is, that is not nearly enough. The administration knows this.

Further, the food aid offered in the recently canceled program was not food that would be diverted to the elite. The food was a porridge made from blended corn and soy beans mixed with vegetable oil and fortified with vitamins. It can only be eaten one way (boiled) and cannot easily be reconstituted into another product. Having eaten “CSB” (as it’s called), I assure you that none of the political elite will eat this. However, starving children will because it saves their lives.

I have spoken to the leaders of the U.S. non-governmental organizations, as well as served as the U.S. ambassador to the World Food Program, and we all know that this food reaches the children and pregnant women who need it. If it did not, each of these agencies would report it and call attention to it – as they have done in the past.

It is a terrible precedent for the administration to tie humanitarian assistance to political objectives. I feel for those in leadership who made this bad decision because there will be political fallout for such a terrible policy. However, I feel much worse for the parents who have to watch their children starve because no government is intervening to assist them in their most desperate hour of need. While there may be little any government can do to make the North Koreans feed their people, it is simply not right for the U.S. not to help these people.