Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Unveiling the North Korean Economy: Collapse and Transition eBook : Kim, Byung-Yeon: Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store

Unveiling the North Korean Economy: Collapse and Transition eBook : Kim, Byung-Yeon: Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store

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Unveiling the North Korean Economy: Collapse and Transition Kindle Edition
by Byung-Yeon Kim (Author) Format: Kindle Edition


4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 11 ratings

North Korea is one of the most closed and secretive societies in the world. Despite a high level of interest from the outside world, we have very little detailed information about how the country functions economically. In this valuable book for both the academic and policy-making circles, Byung-Yeon Kim offers the most comprehensive and systematic analysis of the present day North Korean economy in the context of economic systems and transition economics. It addresses what is really happening in the North Korean economy, why it has previously failed, and how the country can make the transition to a market economy. It takes advantage not only of carefully reconstructed macro data but also rich, new data at the micro level, such as quantitative surveys of North Korean refugees settled in South Korea, and the surveys of Chinese companies that interact heavily with North Korea.

Review
'This brilliant book is a must-read for anyone interested in this mysterious regime.' Lanxin Xiang, Survival

'Totaling just over three hundred pages in length, the scope of this investigation is impressive. Readers with only a passing familiarity with the history of the North Korean economy, or entirely unfamiliar with it, will find much of value in this account. It provides a succinct overview of the basic elements of North Korea's socialist economy and its collapse in the 1990s (and the accompanying famine), as well as a readable overview of the transition, de-centralization, and marketization of the economy and the political implications these changes have for regime stability and the country's political future.' Steven Denney, Journal of American-East Asian Relations

'This is the most important book in the last half century, which comprehensively removes veils of the North Korean economy. Byung-Yeon Kim takes the reader on a joyful tour of solving major mysteries of the economy, based on a rigorous treatment of both macro- and micro-evidence.' Masaaki Kuboniwa, Founding Research Director of the Russian Research Center, Institute of Economic Research, Hitotsubashi University, Tokyo

'Byung-Yeon Kim's book on the North Korean economy is one-of-a-kind. It not only synthesises the surprisingly large amount of information we have on the fast-changing North Korean economy, but also provides a coherent framework for understanding what is happening there now. Not simply a work of economics, this is political economy in the best sense, particularly in its discussion of marketisation from below, possible transition paths for North Korea and the ever-present possibility of breakdown.' Stephan Haggard, Krause Distinguished Professor, University of California, San Diego


About the Author
Byong-Yeon Kim is a Professor in the Department of Economics, Seoul National University. He was the recipient of the T. S. Ashton Prize from the Economic History Society of the UK, the Chungram Award from the Korean Economic Association, and Distinguished Researcher in Humanities and Social Sciences at the National Research Foundation of Korea. He is a member of the executive committee of the Association for Comparative Economic Studies, and a regular columnist on North Korean issues in the Korea Joongang Daily newspaper.

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Top reviews from other countries

Invisible Hand
4.0 out of 5 stars Thorough overview, but argument could be better integrated (and therefore shorter)Reviewed in the United States on 13 May 2018
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The book offers an overview of North Korea's economy and the open source data available to characterize it.

That said, the author devotes a decent amount of space to reviewing the literature on transition economics, contrasting the experiences of countries like China and the former Soviet bloc to setup how she then applies that framework to a possible "transition" in North Korea. So you have to get through some writing that could be condensed while consuming the portions on North Korea, which can be frustrating at times: the author could have condensed her prose such that her argument about the DPRK economy was better integrated with the literature on transition economics that she discusses. But I have yet to see a a book that contains a more thorough overview of the DPRK economy than this one.

In addition, some of the tables render poorly on the Kindle edition.

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