|
ESSAYS IN PUBLIC POLICY
North Korea at a Crossroads
-
Executive Summary
North Korea remains a country difficult for outsiders to analyze, given the paucity of hard data. Yet
certain facts have been established. The economy is in crisis, a product not only of the Russian demise and
the recent floods but of the inadequacies of a Stalinist economic strategy: autarky, imbalance, and
overbureaucratization. A growing number of the elite now recognize these facts, and the momentum for
reform is rising despite perceived political hazards. Whether it will be in time to prevent collapse is
debated by outside observers.
Politically, the effort is to maintain the existing order by reproducing Kim Il Sung in his son,
Kim Jong Il. Young Kim is cultivating the military assiduously and carefully replacing his father's
guerrilla generation with individuals closer to his age, some of them relatives. There are no signs of
cleavage at this point, but the decision-making structure remains difficult to discern. The goal, however, is
clear: total unity under the leader and party.
The Democratic People's Republic of Korea's (DPRK's) foreign policy is rational from the
North's perspective: achieve diplomatic relations with the United States and Japan while relegating the
Republic of Korea (ROK) to the sidelines. Yet improvements in North-South relations will be essential if
the broader goal is to be reached. Meanwhile, relations with China are relatively satisfactory but lack the
old warmth, and those with Russia are still tepid not- withstanding Moscow's efforts.
Despite the uncertainties surrounding the DPRK's future, the interests of others, including the
ROK and the United States, lie in seeing this state undergo an evolutionary process rather than a collapse.
Thus policies should be directed toward that end, acknowledging that the outcome will depend heavily on
North Korean leaders and their decisions.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
|
|