Some stats on North Korea and South Korea
Sometimes a few numbers helps to make already clear distinctions that much more so. The Sept. 27th issue of The Economist magazine had a series of articles on North and South Korea. A sidebar in one of the articles had some numbers that are quite striking:
- North Korea Population: 22.9 million
- South Korea Population: 48.5 million
So North Korea has 47.2% of the population that South Korea has.
- North Korea GDP: 25.6 billion ($)
- South Korea GDP: 957.1 billion ($)
So North Korea has only 2.7% of the GDP that South Korea has! Wow. This works out in GDP per capita to $1,118 for North Korea and $19,751 for South Korea.
Another interesting difference is Power Generation, measured in kWh, 100m:
- North Korea: 225
- South Korea: 3646
Again, that works out to North Korea producing only 6.2% of what South Korea does. No wonder night-time satelite images of North Korea always appear so completely dark!
And while there are no doubt a variety of factors involved in life-expectancy, I would assume that if Korea had been one country for the past 50+ years, the life-expectancy between people in the north and people in the south would be fairly similar. Instead, it seems safe to assume that the policies of the North Korean communist regime are greatly reducing the life expectancy of its people: North Korea's is 67.3 and South Korea's is 78.6.
I'm no expert on North Korea. I learned a lot from my friend Don Parrish's trip report, and from what I gather from news sources, the people in North Korea have systematically lied to for many decades and are very, very isolated. If/when the North Korean Communist regime falls, and the country opens up and attemptes to reintegrate with the rest of the world... what will it be like for the common individuals of that country? It is hard to imagine... and sad to think about... but I just hope we have some good reporters and/or social scientists on the ground when it happens to chronicle it all.
Labels: economics, international

0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Links to this post:
Create a Link
<< Home