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Economic Development under Park Chung Hee and in the DPRK. Nov. 13, 2012. Review. Was Syngman Rhee a democratic leader of Korea? What were Syngman Rhee ’ s economic policies? Did he have any positive impact on the ROK? Why was he overthrown in 1960?
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Economic Development under Park Chung Heeand in the DPRK • Nov. 13, 2012
Review • Was Syngman Rhee a democratic leader of Korea? • What were Syngman Rhee’s economic policies? • Did he have any positive impact on the ROK? • Why was he overthrown in 1960? • Why was democracy cut short in 1961?
Economic Growth under Park • Year Per-capita income (2006 $) • 1965 $1,295 • 1968 1,615 • 1971 1,912 • 1974 2,279 • 1977 2,933 • 1980 3,221 • Growth of GDP: averaged 8.2%/yr between 1962 and 1980. • New Village Movement and village life
Annual Growth Rates • 1962. 2.1 1969 13.8 1976 14.1 • 1963. 9.1 1970 7.6 1977 12.7 • 1964 9.6 1971 8.8 1978 9.7 • 1965 5.8 1972 5.7 1979 6.5 • 1966 12.7 1973 14.1 1980 —5.2 • 1967 6.6 1974 7.7 • 1968 11.2 1975 6.9
Park’s policies • government encouraged borrowing from international lenders by Chaebŏl Also controlled domestic lending by controlling the banks. • government directed investment into areas its economic advisors suggested: Economic Planning Board • normalized relations with Japan, and earned money from Vietnam War • export-oriented (to earn foreign exchange) instead of import substitution. • force used to keep wages low so that Korean goods could be competitive. • started with labour-intensive industries, but then moved on to capital-intensive. • New Village movement--designed to make villagers more productive.
Factors which helped Korea • state intervened to keep prices “wrong,” made sure that subsidies kept Korean products competitive in overseas markets • state imposed performance standards on companies (unlike Rhee) • emphasis on education led to an abundant supply of engineers, who could help deal with imported technology (but that didn’t help India at the same time)
State intervention • Government control of banking • control of capital flight • price controls • wage controls • unions were government controlled. • Economic Planning Board gave administrative guidance.
Good timing • World markets were beginning to open up to goods from other countries • Japan was moving beyond the first stage of industrial exports • there were financial institutions able to lend money to Korean corporations.
Chaebŏl • favoured by the government in order to concentrate capital and expertise. • unlike zaibatusu, did not own banks until recently. • family owned, not publicly-owned • top-down direction, not consensus like in Japan • Tended to have more engineers than managers • Hired the best, by paying better salaries than smaller industries.
Well-known Chaebŏl • Hyundai: founded by Chung Juyoung • Samsung (Lee Byung-chul) • Daewoo (now defunct) Kim Woo Jung • Lucky-Gold Star (LG) Koo In-hwoi • Ssangyong (Kim Sungkon) Ssangyong Motors was recently purchased by an Indian company.
Negative and Positive effects • Negative: uneven development, favouring Seoul and the southeast over the southwest. • sacrificed democracy for economic growth • created tension in society as the rich grew richer and the poor grew frustrated (even though, for many of them, their incomes grew as well • Positive: A middle class began to emerge, which created pressure for democracy. • Koreans ate better, had better homes, were healthier and in general begin to have a higher standard of living.
The DPRK • Economic Decline starting in the 1980s, and then economic collapse in the 1990s. • Growing isolation from the rest of the world, again starting in the 1980s • A Communist dynasty: the third Kim ruler in a row: Kim Il Sung 1948-1994 • Kim Jung Il 1994-2011 • Kim Jung Un 2011---
How have the Kims lasted so long? • Coercion and control of communication • Kim Il Sung held legitimacy according to traditional criteria, and his son has inherited that legitimacy (paternalistic, nationalistic, and not corrupt--traditionally, democracy was not necessary for legitimacy) • The state controls the flow of information • Fear of the US keeps North Korean population in line • Juche provides sacred cover for the government. The fervor with which the North Korean express their belief in Juche resembles the fervor of extremely religious people.
North Korean economic policies • The government makes economic policy, and ensures that its policy dictates are followed. • However, it uses a mixture of ideological and material incentives to try to get the people to work hard enough to meet government targets. • 1958--Chŏllima movement ---speeded up production • Chŏngsan-ri and Taean policies: policy makers and managers meet with the masses to get their input before issuing directives: farms and factories are run by committee made up of party members and experts.
Reasons for economic decline • still an import-substitution, heavy-industry economy • has spent too much on the military • loss of trading partners with the fall of Communism • has tried to grow rice in soil not suited for rice, and has bleached the soil and deforested hillsides • lacks foreign exchange for fuel • Can’t change polities drastically without tarnishing the leader’s claim to legitimacy.
The DPRK and its neighbors • China--is economically dependent on China. Chinese look down on North Koreans • Russia--used to be an ally. Now is closer to South Korea • Japan --never an ally but is more hostile than ever because of the North Korean kidnapping of Japanese.
Nothing to Envy • How did North Koreans react to the news of the death of Kim Il Sung? • What was life like in North Korea in the years following Kim Il Sung’s death? • How did North Koreans survive the hard times of the late 1990s?