Current scholarship on marketization from below in North Korea emphasizes the increased influence of private actors, and portrays this process as eroding state control. While these accounts are largely accurate, they risk overlooking significant policy responses on the part of North Korea’s leadership. Over the course of the past decade, the regime under Kim Jong Un has actively pursued a political-economic model that attempts to institutionalize market activity under strengthened party-state political control. In doing so, the DPRK is hewing toward a model of “market Leninism” or “party-state capitalism” akin to that pursued by contemporary China and Vietnam, rather than that of the Soviet Union or Eastern Europe. By placing North Korea’s political economy in this framework, we can better understand the two key imperatives that have characterized Kim Jong Un’s rule: institutionalization of market mechanisms and strengthened political control.
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March/April 2022
Research Article|
March 07 2022
Toward Market Leninism in North Korea: Assessing Kim Jong Un’s First Decade
Sheena Chestnut Greitens,
Sheena Chestnut Greitens
Sheena Chestnut Greitens is Associate Professor at the LBJ School of Public Affairs, University of Texas at Austin, and Director of UT-Austin’s Asia Policy Program. Email: <[email protected]>.
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Benjamin Katzeff Silberstein
Benjamin Katzeff Silberstein
Benjamin Katzeff Silberstein is a postdoctoral fellow at the Louis Frieberg Center, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and a Non-Resident Fellow at the Henry L. Stimson Center. Email: <[email protected]>.
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Asian Survey (2022) 62 (2): 211–239.
Citation
Sheena Chestnut Greitens, Benjamin Katzeff Silberstein; Toward Market Leninism in North Korea: Assessing Kim Jong Un’s First Decade. Asian Survey 1 April 2022; 62 (2): 211–239. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/as.2022.1541999
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