The colonial period brought forth an entirely new set of
Korean political leaders, spawned by both the resistance to and
the opportunities of Japanese colonialism. In 1919 mass movements
swept many colonial and semicolonial countries, including Korea.
Drawing on Woodrow Wilson's promises of self-determination, on
March 1, 1919, a group of thirty-three intellectuals petitioned
for independence from Japan and touched off nationwide mass
protests that continued for months. These protests were put down
fiercely by the Japanese, causing many younger Koreans to become
militant opponents of colonial rule. The year was a watershed for
imperialism in Korea: the leaders of the movement, predominantly
Christian and Western in outlook, were moderate intellectuals and
students who sought independence through nonviolent means and
support from progressive elements in the West. Their courageous
witness and the nationwide demonstrations that they provoked
remained a touchstone of Korean nationalism. The movement
succeeded in provoking reforms in Japanese administration, but
its failure to realize independence also stimulated radical forms
of anticolonial resistance. In the 1930s, new groups of armed
resisters, bureaucrats, and--for the first time--military leaders
emerged. Both North Korea and South Korea were profoundly
influenced by the political elites and the political conflicts
generated during colonial rule.
The emergence of nationalist and communist groups dates back
to the 1920s; it was in this period that the left-right splits of
postwar Korea began. The transformation of the yangban
aristocracy also began during the 1920s. Although the higher
scholar-officials were pensioned off and replaced by Japanese,
landlords were allowed to retain their holdings and encouraged to
continue disciplining peasants and extracting rice. The
traditional landholding system was put on a new basis through new
legal measures and a full cadastral survey shortly after Japan
took over, but tenancy continued and was systematically deepened
throughout the colonial period. By 1945 Korea had an agricultural
tenancy system with few parallels in the world. More traditional
landlords were content to sit back and let Japanese officials
increase output; by 1945 such people were widely viewed as
treacherous collaborators with the Japanese, and strong demands
emerged that they share out land to their tenants. During the
l920s, however, another trend began: landlords became
entrepreneurs.
Some Korean militants went into exile in China and the Soviet
Union and founded early communist and nationalist resistance
groups. A Korean Communist Party (KCP) was founded in Seoul in
1925; one of the organizers was Pak Hn-yng, who became the
leader of Korean communism in southern Korea after 1945. Various
nationalist groups also emerged during this period, including the
exiled Korean Provisional Government (KPG) in Shanghai, which
included Syngman Rhee and another famous nationalist, Kim Ku,
among its members.
Police repression and internal factionalism made it
impossible for radical groups to exist for any length of time.
Many nationalist and communist leaders were jailed in the early
1930s (they reappeared in 1945). When Japan invaded and then
annexed Manchuria in 193l, however, a strong guerrilla resistance
embracing both Chinese and Koreans emerged
(see
fig. 2). There
were well over 200,000 guerrillas--all loosely connected, and
including bandits and secret societies--fighting the Japanese in
the early 1930s; after murderous but effective counterinsurgency
campaigns, the numbers declined to a few thousand by the
mid-1930s. It was from this milieu that Kim Il Sung (originally
named Kim Sng-ju, born in 1912) emerged. By the mid-1930s, he
had become a significant guerrilla leader whom the Japanese
considered one of the most effective and dangerous of guerrillas.
They formed a special counterinsurgent unit to track Kim down and
put Koreans in it as part of their divide-and-rule tactics.
Both Koreas have spawned myths about the guerrilla
resistance: North Korea claims that Kim single-handedly defeated
the Japanese, and South Korea claims that the present-day ruler
of North Korea is an imposter who stole the name of a revered
patriot. Nonetheless, the resistance is important for
understanding postwar Korea. Resistance to Japan became the main
legitimating doctrine of North Korea: North Koreans trace the
origin of their army, leadership, and ideology back to this
resistance. For the next five decades, the top North Korean
leadership was dominated by a core group that had fought the
Japanese in Manchuria. (Kim Il Sung's tenure in a Russian
reconnaissance brigade also would have had an influence.)
Japan declared war on China in 1937 and on the United States
in 194l. As this war took on global dimensions, Koreans for the
first time had military careers opened to them. Although most
Koreans were conscripted foot soldiers, a small number achieved
officer status and a few attained high rank. The officer corps of
the South Korean army during the Rhee period was dominated by
Koreans with experience in the Japanese army. At least in part,
the Korean War became a matter of Japanese-trained military
officers fighting Japanese-spawned resistance leaders.
Japan's far-flung war effort also caused a labor shortage
throughout the empire. In Korea this situation meant that
bureaucratic positions were more available to Koreans than at any
previous time; thus a substantial cadre of Koreans received
administrative experience in government, local administration,
police and judicial work, economic planning agencies, banks, and
the like. That this occurred in the last decade of colonialism
created a divisive legacy, however, for this period also was the
harshest period of Japanese rule, the time Koreans remember with
the greatest bitterness. Korean culture was quashed, and Koreans
were required to speak Japanese and take Japanese names. The
majority suffered badly at the precise time that a minority was
doing well. This minority was tainted by collaboration, and that
stigma was never lost. Korea from 1937 to 1945 was much like
Vichy France in the early 1940s: bitter experiences and memories
continued to divide people, even within the same family. Because
it was too painful to confront directly, the experience became
buried history and continued to play on the national identity.
In the mid-1930s, Japan's colonial policy entered a phase of
heavy industrialization that embraced all of Northeast Asia.
Unlike most colonial powers, Japan located heavy industry in its
colonies and brought the means of production to the labor and raw
materials. Manchuria and northern Korea got steel mills,
automotive plants, petrochemical complexes, and enormous
hydroelectric facilities. The region was held exclusively by
Japan and tied together with the home market to the point that
national boundaries had became less important than the new
transnational, integrated production. To facilitate this
production, Japan also built railroads, highways, cities, ports,
and other modern transportation and communication facilities. By
1945 Korea proportionally had more kilometers of railroads than
any other Asian country save Japan, leaving only remote parts of
the central east coast and the wild northeastern Sino-Korean
border region untouched by modern means of conveyance. These
changes were externally induced and served Japanese, not Korean
interests. Thus they represented a kind of overdevelopment.
The same exogenous changes fostered underdevelopment in
Korean society as a whole. The Korean upper and managerial
classes did not develop; instead their development was retarded
or swelled suddenly at Japanese behest. Among the majority
peasant class, change was advanced. Koreans became the mobile
human capital used to work the new factories in northern Korea
and Manchuria, mines and other enterprises in Japan, and urban
factories in southern Korea. From 1935 to 1945, Korea began its
industrial revolution with many of the usual characteristics:
uprooting of peasants from the land, the emergence of a working
class, urbanization, and population mobility. In Korea the
process was telescoped, giving rise to comparatively remarkable
population movements. By 1945 about 11 percent of the entire
Korean population was abroad (mostly in Japan and Manchuria), and
20 percent of all Koreans were either abroad or in a province
other than that in which they were born, with most of the
interprovincial movement being southern peasants moving into
northern industry. This was, by and large, a forced or mobilized
movement; by 1942 it often meant drafted, conscripted labor.
Peasants lost land or rights to work land only to end up working
in unfamiliar factory settings, doing the dirty work for a
pittance.
Perhaps the most important characteristic of Korea's colonial
experience was the manner in which it ended: the last decade of a
four-decade imperium was a pressure cooker. The colonial
situation built to a crescendo, abruptly collapsed, and left the
Korean people and two opposing great powers to deal with the
results.
When the colonial system was abruptly terminated in 1945,
millions of Koreans sought to return to their native villages
from these far-flung mobilization details. But they were no
longer the same people: they had grievances against those who had
remained secure at home, they had suffered material and status
losses, they had often come into contact with new ideologies, and
they had all seen a broader world beyond the villages. It was
these circumstances that loosed upon postwar Korea a mass of
changed and disgruntled people who deeply disordered the early
postwar period and the plans of the United States and the Soviet
Union.
|
Background | | An independent kingdom for much of its long history, Korea was occupied by Japan beginning in 1905 following the Russo-Japanese War. Five years later, Japan formally annexed the entire peninsula. Following World War II, Korea was split with the northern half coming under Soviet-sponsored Communist control. After failing in the Korean War (1950-53) to conquer the US-backed Republic of Korea (ROK) in the southern portion by force, North Korea (DPRK), under its founder President KIM Il Sung, adopted a policy of ostensible diplomatic and economic "self-reliance" as a check against outside influence. The DPRK demonized the US as the ultimate threat to its social system through state-funded propaganda, and molded political, economic, and military policies around the core ideological objective of eventual unification of Korea under Pyongyang's control. KIM's son, the current ruler KIM Jong Il, was officially designated as his father's successor in 1980, assuming a growing political and managerial role until the elder KIM's death in 1994. After decades of economic mismanagement and resource misallocation, the DPRK since the mid-1990s has relied heavily on international aid to feed its population. North Korea's history of regional military provocations, proliferation of military-related items, long-range missile development, WMD programs including nuclear weapons test in 2006 and 2009, and massive conventional armed forces are of major concern to the international community.
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Location | | Eastern Asia, northern half of the Korean Peninsula bordering the Korea Bay and the Sea of Japan, between China and South Korea
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Area(sq km) | | total: 120,538 sq km land: 120,408 sq km water: 130 sq km
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Geographic coordinates | | 40 00 N, 127 00 E
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Land boundaries(km) | | total: 1,673 km border countries: China 1,416 km, South Korea 238 km, Russia 19 km
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Coastline(km) | | 2,495 km
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Climate | | temperate with rainfall concentrated in summer
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Elevation extremes(m) | | lowest point: Sea of Japan 0 m highest point: Paektu-san 2,744 m
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Natural resources | | coal, lead, tungsten, zinc, graphite, magnesite, iron ore, copper, gold, pyrites, salt, fluorspar, hydropower
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Land use(%) | | arable land: 22.4% permanent crops: 1.66% other: 75.94% (2005)
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Irrigated land(sq km) | | 14,600 sq km (2003)
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Total renewable water resources(cu km) | | 77.1 cu km (1999)
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Freshwater withdrawal (domestic/industrial/agricultural) | | total: 9.02 cu km/yr (20%/25%/55%) per capita: 401 cu m/yr (2000)
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Natural hazards | | late spring droughts often followed by severe flooding; occasional typhoons during the early fall
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Environment - current issues | | water pollution; inadequate supplies of potable water; waterborne disease; deforestation; soil erosion and degradation
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Environment - international agreements | | party to: Antarctic Treaty, Biodiversity, Climate Change, Climate Change-Kyoto Protocol, Desertification, Environmental Modification, Hazardous Wastes, Ozone Layer Protection, Ship Pollution signed, but not ratified: Law of the Sea
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Geography - note | | strategic location bordering China, South Korea, and Russia; mountainous interior is isolated and sparsely populated
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Population | | 22,665,345 (July 2009 est.)
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Age structure(%) | | 0-14 years: 21.3% (male 2,440,439/female 2,376,557) 15-64 years: 69.4% (male 7,776,889/female 7,945,399) 65 years and over: 9.4% (male 820,504/female 1,305,557) (2009 est.)
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Median age(years) | | total: 33.5 years male: 32.1 years female: 34.9 years (2009 est.)
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Population growth rate(%) | | 0.42% (2009 est.)
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Birth rate(births/1,000 population) | | 14.82 births/1,000 population (2009 est.)
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Death rate(deaths/1,000 population) | | 10.52 deaths/1,000 population (July 2009 est.)
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Net migration rate(migrant(s)/1,000 population) | | -0.09 migrant(s)/1,000 population (2009 est.)
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Urbanization(%) | | urban population: 63% of total population (2008) rate of urbanization: 0.9% annual rate of change (2005-10 est.)
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Sex ratio(male(s)/female) | | at birth: 1.06 male(s)/female under 15 years: 1.03 male(s)/female 15-64 years: 0.98 male(s)/female 65 years and over: 0.63 male(s)/female total population: 0.95 male(s)/female (2009 est.)
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Infant mortality rate(deaths/1,000 live births) | | total: 51.34 deaths/1,000 live births male: 58.64 deaths/1,000 live births female: 43.6 deaths/1,000 live births (2009 est.)
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Life expectancy at birth(years) | | total population: 63.81 years male: 61.23 years female: 66.53 years (2009 est.)
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Total fertility rate(children born/woman) | | 1.96 children born/woman (2009 est.)
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Nationality | | noun: Korean(s) adjective: Korean
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Ethnic groups(%) | | racially homogeneous; there is a small Chinese community and a few ethnic Japanese
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Religions(%) | | traditionally Buddhist and Confucianist, some Christian and syncretic Chondogyo (Religion of the Heavenly Way) note: autonomous religious activities now almost nonexistent; government-sponsored religious groups exist to provide illusion of religious freedom
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Languages(%) | | Korean
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Country name | | conventional long form: Democratic People's Republic of Korea conventional short form: North Korea local long form: Choson-minjujuui-inmin-konghwaguk local short form: Choson abbreviation: DPRK
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Government type | | Communist state one-man dictatorship
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Capital | | name: Pyongyang geographic coordinates: 39 01 N, 125 45 E time difference: UTC+9 (14 hours ahead of Washington, DC during Standard Time)
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Administrative divisions | | 9 provinces (do, singular and plural) and 2 municipalities (si, singular and plural) provinces: Chagang-do (Chagang), Hamgyong-bukto (North Hamgyong), Hamgyong-namdo (South Hamgyong), Hwanghae-bukto (North Hwanghae), Hwanghae-namdo (South Hwanghae), Kangwon-do (Kangwon), P'yongan-bukto (North P'yongan), P'yongan-namdo (South P'yongan), Yanggang-do (Yanggang) municipalities: Nason-si, P'yongyang-si
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Constitution | | adopted 1948; revised several times
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Legal system | | based on Prussian civil law system with Japanese influences and Communist legal theory; no judicial review of legislative acts; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
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Suffrage | | 17 years of age; universal
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Executive branch | | chief of state: KIM Jong Il (since July 1994); note - on 9 April 2009, rubberstamp Supreme People's Assembly (SPA) reelected KIM Jong Il chairman of the National Defense Commission, a position accorded nation's "highest administrative authority"; SPA reelected KIM Yong Nam in 2009 president of its Presidium also with responsibility of representing state and receiving diplomatic credentials head of government: Premier KIM Yong Il (since 11 April 2007); Vice Premier KWAK Pom Gi (since 5 September 1998), Vice Premier O Su Yong (since 13 April 2009), Vice Premier PAK Su Gil (since 18 September 2009), Vice Premier PAK Myong Su (since 4 September 2009), Vice Premier RO Tu Chol (since 3 September 2003) cabinet: Naegak (cabinet) members, except for Minister of People's Armed Forces, are appointed by SPA elections: last held in September 2003; date of next election NA election results: KIM Jong Il and KIM Yong Nam were only nominees for positions and ran unopposed
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Legislative branch | | unicameral Supreme People's Assembly or Ch'oego Inmin Hoeui (687 seats; members elected by popular vote to serve five-year terms) elections: last held 8 March 2009 (next due to be held in March 2014) election results: percent of vote by party - NA; seats by party - NA; ruling party approves a list of candidates who are elected without opposition; a token number of seats are reserved for minor parties
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Judicial branch | | Central Court (judges are elected by the Supreme People's Assembly)
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Political pressure groups and leaders | | none
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International organization participation | | ARF, FAO, G-77, ICAO, ICRM, IFAD, IFRCS, IHO, IMO, IOC, IPU, ISO, ITSO, ITU, NAM, UN, UNCTAD, UNESCO, UNIDO, UNWTO, UPU, WFTU, WHO, WIPO, WMO
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Flag description | | three horizontal bands of blue (top), red (triple width), and blue; the red band is edged in white; on the hoist side of the red band is a white disk with a red five-pointed star
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Economy - overview | | North Korea, one of the world's most centrally directed and least open economies, faces chronic economic problems. Industrial capital stock is nearly beyond repair as a result of years of underinvestment and shortages of spare parts. Large-scale military spending draws off resources needed for investment and civilian consumption. Industrial and power output have declined in parallel from pre-1990 levels. Severe flooding in the summer of 2007 aggravated chronic food shortages caused by on-going systemic problems including a lack of arable land, collective farming practices, and persistent shortages of tractors and fuel. Large-scale international food aid deliveries have allowed the people of North Korea to escape widespread starvation since famine threatened in 1995, but the population continues to suffer from prolonged malnutrition and poor living conditions. Since 2002, the government has allowed private "farmers' markets" to begin selling a wider range of goods. It also permitted some private farming - on an experimental basis - in an effort to boost agricultural output. In October 2005, the government tried to reverse some of these policies by forbidding private sales of grains and reinstituting a centralized food rationing system. By December 2005, the government terminated most international humanitarian assistance operations in North Korea (calling instead for developmental assistance only) and restricted the activities of remaining international and non-governmental aid organizations such as the World Food Program. External food aid now comes primarily from China and South Korea in the form of grants and long-term concessional loans. In May 2008, the US agreed to give 500,000 metric tons of food to North Korea via the World Food Program and US nongovernmental organizations; Pyongyang began receiving these shipments in mid-2008. During the October 2007 summit, South Korea also agreed to develop some of North Korea's infrastructure, natural resources, and light industry, but inter-Korean economic cooperation slowed in 2008 as Pyongyang restricted tourism and manufacturing joint ventures in the North, and food aid from South Korea was suspended. Firm political control remains the Communist government's overriding concern, which will likely inhibit the loosening of economic regulations.
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GDP (purchasing power parity) | | $40 billion (2008 est.) note: data are in 2008 US dollars
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GDP (official exchange rate) | | $26.2 billion (2008 est.)
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GDP - real growth rate(%) | | 3.7% (2008 est.)
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GDP - per capita (PPP) | | $1,800 (2008 est.) note: data are in 2008 US dollars
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GDP - composition by sector(%) | | agriculture: 23.3% industry: 43.1% services: 33.6% (2002 est.)
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Labor force | | 20 million note: estimates vary widely (2004 est.)
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Labor force - by occupation(%) | | agriculture: 37% industry and services: 63% (2004 est.)
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Unemployment rate(%) | | NA%
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Population below poverty line(%) | | NA%
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Household income or consumption by percentage share(%) | | lowest 10%: NA% highest 10%: NA%
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Budget | | revenues: $2.88 billion expenditures: $2.98 billion (2005)
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Inflation rate (consumer prices)(%) | | NA%
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Economic aid - recipient | | $372 million note: approximately 65,000 metric tons in food aid through the World Food Program appeals in 2007, plus additional aid from bilateral donors and non-governmental organizations (2007 est.)
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Agriculture - products | | rice, corn, potatoes, soybeans, pulses; cattle, pigs, pork, eggs
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Industries | | military products; machine building, electric power, chemicals; mining (coal, iron ore, limestone, magnesite, graphite, copper, zinc, lead, and precious metals), metallurgy; textiles, food processing; tourism
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Industrial production growth rate(%) | | NA%
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Exports | | $1.684 billion (2007)
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Exports - commodities(%) | | minerals, metallurgical products, manufactures (including armaments), textiles, agricultural and fishery products
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Exports - partners(%) | | South Korea 45%, China 35%, India 5% (2007)
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Imports | | $3.055 billion (2007) $2.879 billion (2006)
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Imports - commodities(%) | | petroleum, coking coal, machinery and equipment, textiles, grain
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Imports - partners(%) | | China 46%, South Korea 34%, Thailand 6%, Russia 4% (2007)
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Debt - external | | $12.5 billion (2001 est.)
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Exchange rates | | North Korean won (KPW) per US dollar - 140 (2007), 141 (2006), 170 (December 2004), market rate: North Korean won per US dollar - 3,400 (October 2008)
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Currency (code) | | North Korean won (KPW)
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Telephones - main lines in use | | 1.18 million (2008)
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Telephone system | | general assessment: inadequate system; currently mobile cellular telephone services are available in Pyongyang only domestic: fiber-optic links installed between cities; telephone directories unavailable; mobile cellular service, initiated in 2002, suspended in 2004; Orascom Telecom, an Egyptian company, launched mobile service on December 15, 2008 for the Pyongyang area only international: country code - 850; satellite earth stations - 2 (1 Intelsat - Indian Ocean, 1 Russian - Indian Ocean region); other international connections through Moscow and Beijing (2008)
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Internet country code | | .kp
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Airports | | 79 (2009)
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Pipelines(km) | | oil 154 km (2008)
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Roadways(km) | | total: 25,554 km paved: 724 km unpaved: 24,830 km (2006)
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Ports and terminals | | Ch'ongjin, Haeju, Hungnam (Hamhung), Kimch'aek, Kosong, Najin, Namp'o, Sinuiju, Songnim, Sonbong (formerly Unggi), Ungsang, Wonsan
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Military branches | | North Korean People's Army: Ground Forces, Navy, Air Force; civil security forces (2005)
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Military service age and obligation(years of age) | | 17 years of age (2004)
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Manpower available for military service | | males age 16-49: 6,225,747 females age 16-49: 6,188,270 (2008 est.)
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Manpower fit for military service | | males age 16-49: 4,104,964 females age 16-49: 4,492,374 (2009 est.)
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Manpower reaching militarily significant age annually | | male: 191,759 female: 184,641 (2009 est.)
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Military expenditures(% of GDP) | | NA
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Disputes - international | | risking arrest, imprisonment, and deportation, tens of thousands of North Koreans cross into China to escape famine, economic privation, and political oppression; North Korea and China dispute the sovereignty of certain islands in Yalu and Tumen rivers; Military Demarcation Line within the 4-km wide Demilitarized Zone has separated North from South Korea since 1953; periodic incidents in the Yellow Sea with South Korea which claims the Northern Limiting Line as a maritime boundary; North Korea supports South Korea in rejecting Japan's claim to Liancourt Rocks (Tok-do/Take-shima)
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Refugees and internally displaced persons | | IDPs: undetermined (flooding in mid-2007 and famine during mid-1990s) (2007)
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Trafficking in persons | | current situation: North Korea is a source country for men, women, and children trafficked for the purposes of forced labor and commercial sexual exploitation; the most common form of trafficking involves North Korean women and girls who cross the border into China voluntarily; additionally, North Korean women and girls are lured out of North Korea to escape poor social and economic conditions by the promise of food, jobs, and freedom, only to be forced into prostitution, marriage, or exploitative labor arrangements once in China tier rating: Tier 3 - North Korea does not fully comply with minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking and is not making significant efforts to do so; the government does not acknowledge the existence of human rights abuses in the country or recognize trafficking, either within the country or transnationally; North Korea has not ratified the 2000 UN TIP Protocol (2008)
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Electricity - production(kWh) | | 20.9 billion kWh (2007 est.)
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Electricity - production by source(%) | | fossil fuel: 29% hydro: 71% nuclear: 0% other: 0% (2001)
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Electricity - consumption(kWh) | | 17.49 billion kWh (2007 est.)
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Electricity - exports(kWh) | | 0 kWh (2008 est.)
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Electricity - imports(kWh) | | 0 kWh (2008 est.)
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Oil - production(bbl/day) | | 120.7 bbl/day (2008 est.)
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Oil - consumption(bbl/day) | | 16,000 bbl/day (2008 est.)
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Oil - exports(bbl/day) | | 0 bbl/day (2007 est.)
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Oil - imports(bbl/day) | | 13,890 bbl/day (2007 est.)
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Oil - proved reserves(bbl) | | 0 bbl
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Natural gas - production(cu m) | | 0 cu m (2008 est.)
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Natural gas - consumption(cu m) | | 0 cu m (2008 est.)
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Natural gas - exports(cu m) | | 0 cu m (2008)
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Natural gas - proved reserves(cu m) | | 0 cu m (1 January 2009 est.)
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HIV/AIDS - adult prevalence rate(%) | | NA
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HIV/AIDS - people living with HIV/AIDS | | NA
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HIV/AIDS - deaths | | NA
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Literacy(%) | | definition: age 15 and over can read and write total population: 99% male: 99% female: 99%
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Education expenditures(% of GDP) | | NA
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