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Sunday March 21th 2010
SearchEconomy of North Korea | ||
The Economy of North Korea has been in a continued state of flux since the early 1990s, spurred by the disintegration of the North Korea inherited the basic infrastructure of a modern economy at the end of the Japanese colonial era (1910-45) and achieved considerable success due to the ability of the socialist government to marshall unutilized resources and idle labor, and to impose a low rate of consumption. Around the beginning of the 1960s, however, the economy had reached a stage where delays and bottlenecks began to emerge. Once growth could be achieved only by raising productivity through increased efficiency, an expanded resource base, and technological advances, slowdowns and setbacks occurred. Slow economic growth continued into the 1970s and 1980s. Based on chuch'e, the self-reliant economic policy emphasizes heavy industry. This policy, coupled with economic difficulties, has resulted in a poor record of exports, chronic trade deficits, and a sizable external debt, as well as foreign trade primarily oriented toward other communist countries. At the outset of the 1990s, About 81% of Although most North Korean citizens live in cities and work in factories, agriculture remains a rather high 25% of total GNP, although output has not recovered to the levels of the early 1990s. While trade with the South has expanded since 1988, no physical links between the two remain, and the infrastructure of the North is generally poor and outdated. North Korea suffers from chronic food shortages, brought about by the combined effects of a reclusive regime, successive natural disasters, structural constraints — such as little arable land and a short growing season — as well as the fact that food products are deliberately diverted away from citizens and into the military. These shortages were exacerbated by record floods in the summer of 1995 and continued shortages of fertilizer and parts. In response to international appeals, the Copyright 2008 - France BtoB from Wikipédia
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