This change has paralleled Kim Jong Un's rise and consolidation of power over the past five years. His defiant display of nuclear advancements in the face of constant international condemnation, and his brazen assassinations of both his uncle and half-brother, have revealed a young despot far more cruel and clever than his father Kim Jong Il ever was.But in tandem with these hard lines, observers say, he's also adopted an unexpectedly pro-market economic strategy, and the Hermit Kingdom has never looked more like a normal country. Despite the apparent dissonance, Kim's nuclear program and economic agenda are actually two components of a single policy, dubbed the "byungjin line": Becoming a true nuclear power assures North Korea an untouchable status, and economic prosperity ensures that the country's elites and emerging consumer class won't turn against him."They are going seriously capitalist," said Andrei Lankov, a North Korea expert at Seoul's Kookmin University and director of the Korea Risk Group. Lankov has called Kim Jong Un the most pro-market leader North Korea has ever had.Over the past few years, Kim has enacted a series of modest reforms that may seem slight to an outside observer, but in a repressive country like North Korea they're near revolutionary."They are going seriously capitalist."
Factory managers now have the authority to set wages, which has led to salary increases from an average of $1 a month just a few years ago to as much as $120 a month for some workers. That's dreadful by global standards but a boon for many North Koreans. In the last years of Kim Jong Il's rule, illegal markets where people could buy, sell, and barter goods started popping up in response to the dysfunctional state economy. They operated in constant peril of being shut down by authorities, but Kim Jong Un appears to tolerate them, and the number of now authorized markets has more than doubled under his leadership.The result is that across the country — and especially in Pyongyang — a growing number of people no longer lead the strict, spartan lives outsiders associate with the famine that happened 20 years ago."When I lived in Pyongyang in 2009, most of the city was dark by night. When I visited last year, I was amazed by the lights everywhere."
Pyongyang city civilians celebrate the successful completion of the hydrostatic test for the intercontinental ballistic rocket installation in this undated photo released by North Korea's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) in Pyongyang September 6, 2017. Photo by KCNA via Reuters
Simon Cockerell, who just wrapped up his 165th trip to North Korea for Koryo Tours, said the emergence of the middle class has been the biggest change to the country. "It shows a level of aspiration that wasn't really possible some years ago. Consumerism in Pyongyang has become more socially acceptable and visible."The overwhelming majority of North Koreans continue to live in poverty. But experts like Lankov, who has studied the country since the 1980s, say standards have improved across the board, and not just for those at the top. A poor North Korean 20 years ago faced death by starvation. Now, the circumstance is less urgent. "If you are poor it means that you cannot afford to eat pork — but maybe you get a slice of fish every weekend," said Lankov."This isn't the traditional playbook of a third-generation leader, recklessly squandering wealth and power."
North Korean men sit on the bank of the Yalu River in Sinuiju, North Korea, which borders Dandong in China's Liaoning province, September 9, 2017. Photo by Aly Song/Reuters
Melissa Chan is a foreign affairs reporter and current Robert Bosch Foundation Fellow. She is also a collaborator with the Global Reporting Centre and a term member with the Council on Foreign Relations. Follow her on Twitter .