Archive for the ‘Foreign aid statistics’ Category

North Korea has bigger harvest

Tuesday, November 23rd, 2004

UNFAO
11/23/2004

Despite its best harvest in ten years, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) will post another substantial food deficit in 2005 and require external aid to support more than a quarter of its 23.7 million people, two United Nations agencies said today.

A report by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the World Food Programme (WFP) projected domestic cereals availability in the 2004/05 marketing year (November-October) at 4.24 million tonnes, including milled rice and potatoes – a 2.4 per cent increase on 2003/04.

However, it warns that insufficient production, a deficient diet, lower incomes and rising prices mean that 6.4 million vulnerable North Koreans – most of them children, women and the elderly – will need food assistance totaling 500,000 tonnes next year.

Good weather improves 2003 harvest

The 2004 rice paddy harvest was estimated at 2.37 million tonnes, up from 2.24 million tonnes in 2003, thanks primarily to favourable weather, a low incidence of crop pests and diseases, and improved irrigation in the country’s cereal belt. Maize output was unchanged at 1.73 million tonnes.

Forecasting total cereal needs for 2004/05 at 5.13 million tonnes, the UN agencies projected an import requirement of almost 900,000 tonnes. Given anticipated concessional and commercial imports of 400,000 tonnes, the residual gap will be about 500,000 tonnes.

Most of the 16 million people receiving subsidized cereals from the government-run Public Distribution System (PDS) averaging 300 grams per person per day – half a survival ration – cannot make ends meet. They turn to more expensive private markets yet “they are still not able to cover their basic energy requirements,” FAO and WFP said.

Despite good harvest, external food aid needed

The report, which followed a joint assessment mission by the Rome-based food agencies in September and October, says, “the continuing national shortage is still a problem” so “external food aid is in part seen within the context of overall domestic availability.”

It also noted that, increasingly, “the most critical problem for poor households is their lack of access to basic and nutritious food because of declining purchasing power.” As a result, assistance to the food-insecure population “should now be determined more by their household food gap than the national food gap in cereal production.”

“A balanced diet is out of reach for all but a few PDS-dependent households,” the report says. “The situation remains particularly precarious for children in kindergartens, nurseries, orphanages and primary schools, pregnant and nursing women, and elderly people.”

Price of food on new private markets up dramatically

While the prices of state-subsidized rice and maize rationed through the PDS have remained low and stable (at 44 and 24 won a kilo, respectively), prices in private markets have risen dramatically since the introduction of economic reforms in mid-2002.

Last month, rice cost as much as 600 won a kilo in such markets – almost 30 per cent of a typical monthly wage – compared to the 2003 average of 120 won; maize was 320 won a kilo, up from last year’s peak of 110 won. In September, one Euro bought 1600 won on the parallel market.

“The ability of low-income families to obtain food from the market is severely restricted due to their deteriorating purchasing power affected by under- or unemployment and sharp rises in food prices in the market,” according to the report.

An unintended consequence of reform has been the problem of higher food prices, which has been compounded by widespread and steep cuts in already meagre wage earnings as ailing enterprises in predominantly industrial DPRK shed labour.
Food rations meet just half a person’s minimum needs

The typical wage earner’s family now spends one-third of its monthly income on PDS rations that meet only half its minimum caloric needs. Another one-third is spent on non-food essentials – rent, heating and clothing. The remainder is insufficient to purchase enough food in private markets to meet the rest of the family’s very basic needs.

Much of the population, consuming very little protein, fat or micronutrients, suffers from critical dietary deficiencies. Fresh vegetables and fruit are either scarce or very expensive outside of the July-September period.

Traditional coping mechanisms such as animal husbandry, the cultivation of household gardens and hillside plots, the gathering of wild foods and transfers from relatives in the countryside, afford some relief to hard-pressed urban residents. Small-scale income-generating activities, notably petty trade and services, allowed under an easing of restrictions on private and semi-private enterprise are other sources of much needed income.

Better farm machinery and improved soil fertility needed

To deal with the chronic, structural food deficit, the FAO/WFP report recommended that the international community enter into a dialogue with the DPRK government toward the eventual mobilization of the economic, financial, and other resources needed to promote sustainable production and overall food security.

The report also proposed examination of investment projects on soil fertility and better farm machinery to allow further expansion of the country’s double-cropped area.

WFP has provided the DPRK with almost four million tonnes of food assistance, valued at $1.3 billion, since 1995.

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North Korea Development Report 2003/04

Friday, July 30th, 2004

KIEP has published the North Korea Development Report 2003/04 (follow the link to download all several hundred pages!)

Summary: As a result of North Korea’s isolation from the outside world, international
communities know little about the status of the North Korean economy and its
management mechanisms. Although a few recent changes in North Korea’s economic system have attracted international interests, much confusion remains as to the characteristics of North Korea’s recent policy changes and its future direction
due to the lack of information. Therefore, in order to increase the understanding of readers in South Korea and abroad, KIEP is releasing The North Korea Development Report in both Korean and English. The motivation behind this report stemmed from the need for a comprehensive and systematic investigation into North Korea’s socio-economic conditions, while presenting the current status of its industrial sectors and inter-Korean economic cooperation. The publishing of this second volume is important because it not only supplements the findings of the first edition, but also updates the recent changes in the North Korean economy. The topics in this report include macroeconomics and finance, industry and infrastructure, foreign economic relations and inter-Korean economic cooperation, social welfare and science & technology.

This report also covers the ‘July 1 Economic Reform’ launched two years ago and
subsequent changes in the economic management system. The North Korea
Development Report helps to improve the understanding of the contemporary North
Korean economy.
Table of Contents  
 
Part I Macroeconomic Status and Finance
Chapter 1 Current Status of the North Korean Economy and Its Prospects
Chapter 2 National Financial Revenue and Expenditure
Chapter 3 Banking and Price Management

Part II Industrial Management and Problems
Chapter 4 The Industrial Sector
Chapter 5 The Agricultural Sector
Chapter 6 Social Overhead Capital
Chapter 7 Commerce and Distribution Sector
Chapter 8 The Defense Industry

Part III International Economic Activities
Chapter 9 Foreign Economic Relations
Chapter 10 Special Economic Zones
Chapter 11 Inter-Korean Economic Relations

Part IV Social Security and Technology Development
Chapter 12 Social Security and Social Services
Chapter 13 Science and Technology Sector

Part V The Recent Economic Policy Changes
Chapter 14 The Contents and Background for the Recent Policy Changes
Chapter 15 The Features and Problems of the Recent Economic Policy Changes
Chapter 16 Prospects and Future Tasks of the July 1 Economic Reform  

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Reforms Turn Disastrous for North Koreans

Monday, January 27th, 2003

Washington Post
John Pomfret
1/27/2003, Page AOl

Nuclear Crisis May Have Roots in Economic Failure

Six months after North Korea announced unprecedented wage and price increases to jump-start its miserable economy, runaway inflation is emptying millions of pocketbooks and bottlenecks in production are causing widespread shortages, according to Chinese and North and South Korean sources.

The black market price of rice, the staple of the Korean diet, has jumped more than 50 percent over the past three months in most parts of the country while tripling in others, according to North Koreans, Chinese businessmen and Western aid agency workers. Some factories in poorer parts of the country, such as the heavily industrialized east coast, have stopped paying workers the higher salaries that were a cornerstone of the reforms, recent North Korean arrivals to China said. Others have taken to paying workers with coupons that can be exchanged for goods, they said, but there are no goods in the stores to buy.

“Theft new economic policy has failed,” said Oh Seung Yul, an economist at the government-funded Korea Institute for National Unification in Seoul. “The hopes that were raised in July are today pretty much dashed.”

The apparent failure of North Korea’s attempt to promote economic activity and improve living standards constitutes an important backdrop for its recent threats to resume a nuclear weapons program, according to the sources.

On one hand, Oh and others said, North Korea’s isolated government needed a scapegoat. On the other, according to Chinese sources close to the secretive government of Kim Jong Ii, Pyongyang has determined that it risks economic collapse without security guarantees and access to international lending institutions such as the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, to which the United States holds the keys. So Kim manufactured a crisis to win concessions, they said.

“Now the economic situation is more precarious than before the reforms. They can’t do this halfway,” said Cui Yingjiu, a Chinese Korean economist and adviser to the North Korean government. “They risk social chaos and economic collapse.”

The crisis has been exacerbated by a drop in the humanitarian aid that had kept North Korea on life support since 1995. Because of a shortage of donations, the World Food Program has cut back the number of North Koreans it is assisting this year from 6.4 million to 3.5 million of the country’s estimated 22.6 million inhabitants. In September, the elderly and primary school-age children on the west coast were cut off. In October, kindergarten-age children, pregnant women and nursing mothers there lost out. In November, nurseries were scratched from the list.

“It’s a tough call deciding who has to be deprived,’ said Gerald Bourke, an official with the World Food Program in Beijing. Bourke said the recent “very rapid inflation” of rice prices is “putting food way beyond the pale for a lot of people.”

The World Food Program has 25,000 tons of food in North Korea and pledges of 75,000 additional tons, he said. It needs 511,000 tons this year.

North Koreans traveling over the border to Yanji, about 700 miles northeast of Beijing, said an initial wave of hope triggered by the changes announced in July is gone in almost all parts of the country except the capital, Pyongyang.

Lee Xiangyu, a North Korean refugee in China, was arrested by Chinese border police and returned to North Korea last summer, when the changes began. After a short stint in jail, the 19-year-old returned to her home town, Musan, along the border with China. By October, she said, the lumberyard where her father worked had stopped paying him and other workers the huge raises they had received as part of the effort to promote some aspects of a free-market economy.

But prices continued to rise. “There was no money in my house, and now the prices are so high,” she said. Lee sneaked back into China in December. “It’s not like it was in 1997 when people were starving to death,” she said, speaking of the famine that cost hundreds of thousands of lives. “But it’s worse in a way. Because everybody had hope for a little while and now they are desperate again.”

North Korea’s announcement of economic reforms was front-page news, in part because the measures fit into a series of other moves that led some observers to conclude Kim was ready to lead his country out of isolation. The steps included expression of regret following a clash between North and South Korean naval forces in June, the suggestion that North Korea would hand over Japanese Red Army members wanted in Japan for hijacking a Japanese airliner in 1970, an informal meeting in July between North Korean Foreign Minister Paek Nam Sun and Secretary of State Cohn L. Powell, transportation links between North and South Korea, a summit between Kim and Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi and talk of establishing as many as five special zones for foreign investment.

The economic changes included raising prices and wages, devaluing the North Korean won against the dollar and cutting state subsidies for failing businesses. Wages were increased between 900 percent and 1,500 percent. Prices, which are in theory set by the state, went up as well. Rice went up 4,000 percent, corn 3,700, pork 700, diesel fliel 3,700, electricity 5,900, apartment rent 2,400 and subway tickets 900.

The government announced that factories with bloated workforces could effectively lay off unnecessary workers so they could concentrate on making things again — a step North Korean industry had not taken since economic troubles began in 1995.

The main motivation for increasing the price of rice was to prompt farmers to plant more food. But Cui, who attended a conference on North Korea’s economic changes last fall in Pyongyang, said farmers were not happy.

“Grain prices went up, but so did prices for inputs like fertilizers and seeds,” he said. ‘So all gains were canceled out.”

Another issue, Cui said, is electricity. North Korea has good hydropower resources, but as farmers become interested in planting more crops, they will want to use water in reservoirs for irrigation, not for power generation. “There are a whole series of these conundrums and Catch 22s,” Cui said.

He said North Korean factories have yet to begin producing goods people want to buy. That is why trucks rolling into China from the Dandong border crossing, 350 miles southwest of Yanji, now carry clothes, television sets, shampoo and other consumer goods.

The changes befliddled Western and Chinese economists from the beginning. Chinese experts noted that when China undertook its first major economic reform in 1979, it increased the price of grain by only 25 percent. Second, they said, when China began this process, 80 percent of its population lived in rural areas, so there was a huge pooi of potential beneficiaries from the liberalized agricultural policies. But North Korea is highly industrialized: Two-thirds of its people live in cities.

Marcus Noland, at the Institute for International Economics in Washington, speculated that the changes were either a desperate attempt to jump-start a half-dead economy or a backhanded attack against North Korea’s nascent private economy. Increasing prices would reduce the value of currency held outside the state system, breaking the back of private entrepreneurs.

But then again, he said in a recent paper, “the possibility that economic decisions are being made by people who do not grasp the implications of their actions should not be dismissed toohastily.”

Correspondents Doug Struck and Peter £ Goodman in Seoul contributed to this report

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NORTH KOREA STILL NEEDS FOOD AID DESPITE BEST HARVEST IN SIX YEARS

Sunday, October 21st, 2001

UNFAO
10/26/2001

The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea is likely to record its best harvest for six years, but with domestic food production still well below consumption requirements, the country will again need substantial external assistance in 2002, two United Nations agencies said today.

Favourable weather during the main growing season, bigger budgetary allocations for agriculture, greater use of farm machinery and increased supplies of donated fertiliser should enable DPRK to produce some 3.54 million tonnes of cereals in 2001/02 (including rice in milled terms and potatoes in cereal equivalent (2001/02), up 38 percent on the previous year’s harvest and its highest output since 1995/96, according to a report by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the World Food Programme (WFP).

Relatively good and well-distributed rainfall from mid-June to end-August benefited the main 2001 crops, overcoming the adverse effects of a prolonged spring drought, experts from the Rome-based agencies who undertook an assessment mission to the country from 25 September to 5 October concluded.

Rice production was forecast to reach 1.34 million tonnes (milled basis) in 2001, 22 percent more than last year, and the maize harvest projected to rise by 42 percent to 1.48 million tonnes.

The overall 3.54 million tonne estimate for 2001/02 includes yet-to-be-planted winter/spring wheat, barley and potato crops that in recent years accounted for 10-15 per cent of the country’s annual output. “The production estimate may need to be revised once the harvest outcome of these crops is known,” the FAO/WFP report noted.

But it pointed out that in addition to perennial droughts and floods, critical shortages of fertiliser, agro-chemicals and farm machinery persist, and there is little scope for expanding the cultivable area beyond its present level of some two million hectares.

Notwithstanding the significant recovery this year, “domestic production will fall well below the minimum food needs and the country will again have to depend on substantial external food assistance next year as its capacity to import commercially remains highly constrained,” the report said.

Estimating total cereal utilization needs in 2001/02 at 5.01 million tonnes, it therefore projected a deficit of 1.47 million tonnes (down from 2.2 million tonnes in 2000/01). “With commercial imports anticipated at 100,000 tonnes, 1.37 million tonnes will need to be covered by food aid and concessional food imports.”

On the basis of vulnerability assessments the report recommended that about 610,000 tonnes of food aid, including 525,000 tonnes of cereals and 85,000 tonnes of other food items be mobilised for population groups deemed to be most at risk: small children, pregnant and nursing women, and the elderly – especially in urban areas. It said bilateral aid and concessional food imports should meet the balance.

“The uncovered deficit is large and must be viewed very seriously. It needs to be emphasised that unless the international community responds positively and substantially, millions of people of DPR Korea, including large number of children, old people, pregnant women and lactating mothers will face hunger over prolonged periods with severe consequences for their health and welfare,” the joint report says.

“The crucial food aid safety net needs to be maintained until sustainable food security is achieved through the recovery of the economy and the rehabilitation of the agriculture sector, for which substantial international assistance will be needed,” the report concluded.

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UN FOOD AGENCIES SAY NORTH KOREA STILL NEEDS SUBSTANTIAL FOOD ASSISTANCE DESPITE IMPROVED HARVEST; CITE NEED FOR ECONOMIC REFORM AND INCREASED AID TO AGRICULTURE

Thursday, November 13th, 1997

UNFAO
11/13/1997

Despite an improved harvest in North Korea, the country will enter 1999 with a large food deficit and will need to import 1.35 million tonnes of food grain, including 1.05 million tonnes as food assistance to meet the minimum nutritional requirements of the population, according to a joint report by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the UN World Food Programme (WFP).

The report, based on the findings of a crop and food supply assessment mission that toured the country extensively last month, forecasts North Korea’s cereal production for 1998/99 at 3.5 million tonnes, some 30 percent higher than last year’s severely reduced crop.

But this harvest is only enough to cover minimum consumption needs for eight months. Apart from foreign exchange constraints that limit commercial imports, the general economic decline in the country and natural disasters have seriously compromised national food security.

“The food situation in DPR Korea (North Korea) remains precarious and the country urgently needs to address the underlying problems in the economy and agriculture if it is to avert serious problems in the future,” said the assessment team leader Mr. Abdur Rashid.

The report recommends that out of the 1.05 million tonnes of food aid needed, some 480,000 tonnes be targeted mostly to children, hospital patients and pregnant and nursing women. The remaining cereal shortfall of 574,000 tonnes will be needed to help the general population meet its minimum needs.

The report calls for immediate attention to be “focused on improving agricultural input supplies, mainly fertilisers, spare parts and fuel” to “enable the country to produce enough food to meet its minimum needs.”

“It is imperative that the international assistance to agriculture be increased substantially from its current low levels,” the report said, because “future food security in DPR Korea (North Korea) will crucially depend on solutions that address the major economic difficulties. In the absence of these, even without natural hazards, the food supply situation will remain highly precarious as the productivity in agriculture falls and the capacity of the country to finance commercial food imports dwindles and barter trade becomes a progressively less viable option.”

“Despite favourable weather this year, food production has not recovered sufficiently enough to avert serious food shortages,” said WFP’s Senior Program Coordinator for North Korea, Mr. Saeed Malik, adding, “The food crisis has been compounded by a complete run-down of the country’s economy.”

The natural disasters that struck North Korea from 1995 to 1997, including two years of flooding followed by serious drought and a typhoon, aggravated the underlying structural problems of the economy. The situation worsened further with the loss of favourable economic ties with the former USSR and other centrally planned economies in eastern Europe which had provided North Korea with large amounts of aid and trade benefits.

Today, the agriculture sector faces a lack of spare parts for broken machinery, shortages of fuel, irrigation difficulties and a shortage of pesticides. But, the shortage of fertiliser is the most serious problem for domestic food production, according to the report. North Korea’s three fertiliser factories have a total capacity of over 400,000 tonnes of nitrogen nutrient which could be enough for self-sufficiency, but the factories are obsolete, poorly maintained and face shortages of spate parts and raw materials, mainly fuel, causing fertiliser availability for 1998 to dwindle.

“The capacity of North Korea to provide adequate food for its population is constrained by the shortage of agricultural inputs such a fuel and fertiliser needed to produce food domestically and the reduced capacity of the economy to supplement domestic food production through commercial imports,” said the report, adding: “Food security in the country critically depends on general economic performance and the efforts to increase domestic food production.”

Other recommendations in the report include:

· Rehabilitation and development of the irrigation system and improved water management;

· Crop diversification to enhance soil productivity and reduce risk of crop losses in any one year due to adverse weather conditions;

· Research into effective crop rotation schemes including legumes to promote soil fertility and productivity; and,

· Research on seed improvement, and early and short-maturing and less chemical fertiliser dependent crop varieties.

· In the context of these recommendations, the UN Development Programme-led Round Table in support of Agricultural Recovery and Environmental Protection is an important initiative towards a strategic approach.

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UN food agencies say continued poor food production has trapped North Korea in a vicious circle of poor nutrition

Sunday, November 9th, 1997

UNFAO
11/9/1997

The nutritional situation in North Korea remains fragile in spite of the country’s efforts to redress chronic food problems, United Nations food agencies said today in their latest comprehensive food assessment report.

“Given the scale of the problem and its root causes, future food supply prospects are almost entirely contingent on international food and rehabilitation assistance, economic growth and the ability of the country to integrate itself into the global economy,” the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and World Food Programme (WFP) said in a report on their recent joint mission to North Korea.

“Failing these requisites, food availability and health and nutritional standards will continue to fall markedly,”

Living standards in North Korea have significantly declined in the last four years as the availability of food per person has shrunk, while serious health problems have increased because resources, drugs and essential supplies are unavailable. A vicious circle of poor nutrition compounding poor health and vice versa has become deeply entrenched, the report said.

“Widespread starvation has only been averted by concerted national efforts and the unprecedented volume of humanitarian food assistance provided by the international community,” according to the report.

The mission, which visited North Korea 9-19 October, said the food supply situation “will remain precarious over the next 12 months despite some improvement in rice production this year, due principally to increased fertiliser use, adequate irrigation supplies and the absence of serious pest and disease attacks.”

However, the report cautioned, the gains in rice production were more than offset by the reduction in maize output as the area cultivated fell sharply.

Based on population figures provided by North Korea’s government, grain demand for food and other uses for 1999/2000 is said to be 4.76 million tonnes. This leaves a deficit of about 1.29 million tonnes, of which the government is expected to import 300,000 tonnes commercially. A further 370,000 tonnes is covered by food aid imports in the pipeline, leaving 623,000 tonnes of grain that will need to come through assistance programmes. The food deficit has not significantly changed since the last year’s FAO/WFP crop and food supply assessment mission to North Korea.

According to the FAO/WFP report, there are signs that economic sanctions on North Korea by leading industrialized countries may be further relaxed, which could lead to recovery in the economy and rehabilitation in agriculture. “This inevitably will have a significant and positive impact on sustainable food security.”

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UN food agencies alarmed at catastrophic impact of drought: 1997

Friday, September 12th, 1997

UNFAO
9/12/1997

The United Nations food agencies today expressed “very serious alarm” over food shortages in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (North Korea) where drought and a destructive typhoon have aggravated the effects of two years of floods.

“These catastrophic events will undoubtedly have serious and long reaching repercussions in the country’s already grave food supply situation,” the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and World Food Programme (WFP) warned in a report on a mission to North Korea.

North Korea will now have to depend to an even greater extent on international assistance for food, agricultural rehabilitation and vital inputs of seed and fertilizers.

“Without these interventions the human consequences are likely to be dire,” the report said.

The mission, which visited North Korea 16-26 August, said drought has devastated crops throughout the country. Typhoon Winnie caused extensive damage last month to rice in coastal areas in the west where tidal waves destroyed dikes and seawater invaded cropland.

“Guarded optimism expressed earlier for some recovery in food production this year is now replaced by very serious alarm at food security prospects for the coming months and year ahead,” the report said.

In preliminary estimates, pending the visit of another FAO/WFP mission to North Korea in connection with next month’s harvest, the report said the country could lose 1.25 million tons of maize even if there is adequate rainfall this month. With rain, the rice crop could be down by 342,000 tons, without rain by 630,000 tons.

“Imports from commercial channels are likely to become increasingly strained due to growing and chronic economic difficulties and the lack of foreign exchange,” the mission said.

“As the general health of the population has now already been highly weakened by the shortage of adequate food in recent years, especially amongst vulnerable groups, the anticipated shortfall this year is likely to have far-reaching implications that go beyond the devastation of 1995 and 1996.”

WFP, which has been providing emergency food aid to North Korea since 1995, has appealed for donations of US$144.1 million to provide the country with 333,200 tons of food during the period between April 1997 and March 1998. Contributions as of 1 September totalled 322,500 tons or 97 percent of the appeal.

The food is being distributed to 2.6 million children aged 6 or younger, some 250,000 farmers and workers and their 850,000 dependants taking part in flood rehabilitation projects and up to one million hospital patients.

The UN agencies say the ability of North Korea to provide adequate food to its population continues to be hampered by two basic facts: the resources it has available to produce food domestically and the ability of the economy to provide inputs for agriculture and supplement the food supply with imports when there are production shortfalls.

According to the FAO/WFP report, future food security in the country depends as much on general economic performance as on efforts to increase output in agriculture.

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NORTH KOREA URGENTLY NEEDS 50 000 TONS OF FERTILISER TO BOOST RICE PRODUCTION, FAO SAYS

Monday, June 30th, 1997

UNFAO
6/30/1997

The UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has launched an international appeal for the supply of about 50 000 tons of fertiliser to North Korea. The fertiliser should be distributed to farmers for rice cultivation for an area of over 500 000 hectares, FAO said today.

Through the delivery of fertiliser within the next six weeks and by latest 25 July for the present planting season, rice production could be increased by about
370 000 tons or 24 percent, according to FAO. The delivery would be co-ordinated and monitored by FAO.

This would ensure a total rice supply for around 60 days. The costs are estimated at $11 million. In comparison, $11 million would cover the costs of only 36 000 tons of rice for the minimum food needs of the population.

Without international assistance North Korea will face “an important fertiliser gap” this year, FAO said. In 1996 only up to 30 percent of the country’s fertiliser needs were covered.

An FAO/World Food Programme (WFP) mission to North Korea reported recently that food rations are running out. Food rations have been only 100 to 200 grams per person per day since early this year, compared to a minimum requirement of 450 grams. Malnutrition has become chronic and life-threatening.

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NORTH KOREA STILL NEEDS MASSIVE FOOD ASSISTANCE

Friday, December 6th, 1996

UNFAO
12/6/1996

North Korea approaches 1997 in a far worse position than 1996 and still needs large scale amounts of international food assistance just to meet its minimum food needs, two UN agencies reported Friday.

“Two successive years of floods have undoubtedly set back agriculture and have significantly compounded underlying food production problems in the country”, said the report issued by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the UN World Food Programme (WFP).

Besides the floods, “economic problems have manifested themselves in falling productivity and output in the agriculture sector”, said the report, which was based on a recent visit to the country by representatives of the two agencies.

The FAO/WFP mission to North Korea also reported that domestic production of fertilizers and imports of essential items — like fuel and spare parts — have fallen drastically in recent years. Food production in North Korea is constrained by geography, land availability, climate and continuous cultivation, which has seriously depleted soils.

“The balance in agriculture can easily be upset by natural calamities, such as the floods in the last two years”, the agencies said. North Korea “can simply not produce enough food grains to meet demand and has a growing dependence on imports”.

The agencies reported that Pyongyang, lacking foreign exchange, burdened with huge international debts and having virtually no access to credit, last year resorted to “desperate measures,” such as bartering badly needed raw materials for grain to cope with the food emergency.

The mission reported that up to half of the country’s 1996 maize harvest and almost all of the potato harvest were consumed early, in August and September, due to severe food shortages. Borrowing part of this year’s harvest in advance means the country has merely deferred the food problem to 1997, the agencies reported.

Overall domestic production of milled rice and maize available for use in this marketing year amounts to 2.8 million tons, 2.3 million tons short of minimum needs.

The critical period will come from July to September next year, the agencies reported. “Only if adequate food assistance is mobilized before the onset of this period, will further hardship in the population be averted”, they said.

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