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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Kim Kwang-jin

Interviewed May 20, 2024

Markets started cropping up naturally during the famine; the regime tried to stop the creation of these markets, but it failed. It tries to control markets by creating what they call “composite markets.”

[In the mid-1990s, North Korea experienced mass famine that resulted in an estimated three million deaths.]

But these days, the regime accepts the creation of markets and is taking several natural measures to protect them. Eventually, the concept of markets will undermine the philosophy of socialism and communism.

So in the end, the creation of markets and prevalence of markets will hamper the regime and its ability to maintain power. Through markets, people’s values and thoughts change. In the past, for the North Koreans, the party and the great leader and expressing loyalty to the leader were a citizen’s primary values.
But when people are exposed to markets, they open their eyes to wealth, to material profits, so the object of their interests and attention shifts from the great leader to personal interests.

This will weaken unity between the great leader and the population. And it will have a negative effect on the philosophy of having an absolute leader in North Korea.