Noland, Marcus (2024): Turning Back the Clock: The Changing Nature of North Korean Food Insecurity.
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Abstract
Over the past several years, North Korea has adopted legal changes that are increasing the centrality of the Workers Party of Korea and the state in agricultural production, distribution, and consumption. This development changes the basic nature of food insecurity in North Korea from one in which access to food is determined by the ability to purchase it in the market to one in which access to food is determined by political status. This development is of potential policy relevance: Although current conditions do not appear to be severe, if and when North Korea experiences another food crisis, foreign partners are likely to encounter a state-dominated model resembling the system that existed in the early 1990s at the onset of the famine and with it the attendant problems that humanitarian-relief agencies confronted at that time.
Item Type: | MPRA Paper |
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Original Title: | Turning Back the Clock: The Changing Nature of North Korean Food Insecurity |
Language: | English |
Keywords: | famine; food security; food prices; North Korea; entitlement |
Subjects: | P - Economic Systems > P3 - Socialist Institutions and Their Transitions P - Economic Systems > P3 - Socialist Institutions and Their Transitions > P32 - Collectives ; Communes ; Agriculture P - Economic Systems > P3 - Socialist Institutions and Their Transitions > P36 - Consumer Economics ; Health ; Education and Training ; Welfare, Income, Wealth, and Poverty Q - Agricultural and Natural Resource Economics ; Environmental and Ecological Economics > Q1 - Agriculture |
Item ID: | 120950 |
Depositing User: | Marcus Noland |
Date Deposited: | 21 May 2024 13:37 |
Last Modified: | 21 May 2024 13:37 |
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URI: | https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/id/eprint/120950 |