Archive for the 'Financial' Category

Ora Bank

Orascom Telecom Holding SAE has announced that they would like to get paid for their telecom services that they will be providing in North Korea by opening up their own bank and presumably handling subscriber payments and financing of that oh-so-chic $700 3G cell phone.

There were times that, out of my personal budget, payments to Verizon and Visa were some of my biggest monthly expenses (aside from rent).  Looks like Orascom understands this as well.

“This is a big deal, especially as far as North Korea is concerned, because the current banking system is virtually non- existent,” - Marcus Noland of the Peterson Institute for International Economics

Winds of Change: Marcus Noland

Here’s an enlightening interview with Marcus Noland, currently a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics and an expert on North Korea.  According to Mr. Noland, a growth rate of 7% and an economically different North Korea by 2018 is in the offing:

“I would be very surprised if we sat down 10 years from now and North Korea had not changed significantly,” said Marcus Noland, an expert on the North Korean economy at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington.

The fact that the DPRK is surrounded by high growth countries (China to the north and west, Japan to the east, and South Korea to the south) and continues to have a moribund economy points to the potential for growing 6 to 7 percent every year - as well as a testimony to the real and significant internal problems within Pyongyang.

“The way I would describe North Korea today is that its government is extremely insecure about the domestic political implications of a potential economic change. As a consequence, it is highly risk-averse.”

DPRK is “risk averse”?  Such irony:  What about all the would-be-investors in North Korea: they sure are risk averse as well…

Mr. Noland observed that all authoritarian regimes face problems with succession.  But due to the extreme cult of personality surrounding Kim Jong-il and the lack of an obvious successor, that this regime faces an unusually profound issue with respect to succession.

While acknowledging that most analysts agree on the potential for an emerging collective form of leadership based on the National Defense Commission:

“I am not sure if this outline of a collective form of leadership is sustainable in the long run. I would expect a new situation, perhaps analogous to the situation experienced by South Korea following the assassination of former President Park Chung-hee, where there was a real uncertainty for months about who exactly was running the country before General Chun Doo-hwan eventually emerged as the supreme leader,” he said. “I think something like that is likely to be the case in North Korea in coming years.”

Mr. Noland continues on to discuss two paths to a unified Korea: 1) a slow and protracted consensual coming together of the two sides or 2) obviously some sort of North Korean collapse and absorption by the South ala Germany.

For China’s part, it seems to be preparing for the eventual unification of the Koreas as mentioned in this article about the economic development of the Paektu-san/Changbai-shan region.

Editorial: The Incredible Diminishing US

North Korea just stuck it’s thumb in the eyes of the US by re-assembling it’s nukes, disregarding the terrorism blacklist, testing missile engines and George Bush’s response - nothing.

Russia kicked sand in America’s face and marched into the sovereign country of Georgia and NATO’s response - nada.

US tried to clean up Al-Qaeda that Pakistan seemed unable to do and Pakistan’s response - get the heck out of our land and don’t let the front door of the Marriott hit your ass on the way out…  What is it with these people?  Aren’t we fighting the same bad guys?

On the US home front: Wall Street greed and greedy home owners all consorted to conjure up the worst set of toxic debt ever and US government’s response - bail out the schmucks, reward their promiscuity and save their golden parachutes.

How will the US pay for this bailout?  By printing more money and selling more US government bonds.  Who will buy them?  You guessed it - most likely foreign investors.  What affect will this have on US foreign policy?  Unknown, but I’m sure the US will have to take all this into account before starting any new wars.  The picture of an America tip-toeing around the world seems sad…

Let’s face it, the US is turning into a land of irrelevance.

I caught the CNN interview of 5 former secretaries of state and their recommendations for the next president.  The diminished standing, power and influence of the US was palpable.  The strong, silent confidence of America seemed hard to find -many of the recommendations seemingly centered around “collaboration” and “co-operation” with other nations.

With credibility in the world diminished from the War in Iraq, the US is now having to reap what it sowed.

Obama or McCain - it doesn’t matter which one - you have some serious diminishment to deal with…