Pondering Korean reunification

Very positive news came out of Beijing today, where representatives from the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, or North Korea, agreed to halt development of its nuclear program.  As one who lives close to the Korean demilitarized zone (DMZ) in Seoul, I was very excited to learn that there was a major breakthrough in the Six-Party Talks on North Korea’s nuclear program.  Congratulations to U.S. Assistant Secretary of State and Envoy to the talks, Christopher Hill, and his team for a job well done.  There is still much work to be done, and the North Koreans have to follow through with what they have agreed to do.  Nevertheless, this is the most positive breakthrough since the 1994 Agreed Framework.  Perhaps as significant as the dismantling of North Korea’s nuclear program, the agreement also offers mutual security assurances and paves the way for normalized relations between the U.S. and North Korea.
 
This news is an excellent prelude to today’s blog topic, Korean reunification.  I want to share with you what I think Korea will be like following reunification, assuming that Korea reunites according to what many Koreans believe will happen.  Last month, the Korea Times released survey results indicating that 31 of 34 Korea experts believe that the Korean Peninsula will be politically reunited within 10-20 years.  Many South Koreans believe that the two Koreas will reunite peacefully and that the South Korean political system will serve as the foundation of the government of a united Korea (as opposed to North Korean communism and juche, an ideology of self reliance).  A large number of South Korean also think that reunification will is unlikely so long as Kim Jong Il rules North Korea.  A internal coup d’etat overthrowing the Dear Leader is unlikely to happen.  The 64-year-old leader (his exact age is unclear) could remain in power for quite some time, because many communist leaders have been blessed with very long lifespans.  Many South Koreans assume that once a new leader emerges in North Korea, quite possibly one of Kim Jong Il’s sons or a prominent member of the Korean Worker’s Party, North Korea will be ready for reunification.  I question this logic.  It does not necessarily follow that North Korea will be ready for detente and reunification once a new leader is in place.  Still, let’s assume that the Korean experts are right and that Korea will be reunited within the next 20 years.  What will Korea be like after it reunifies?
  1. Korea will be a major military power.  With an estimated troop strength of 1.1 million in North Korea and 650,000 in South Korea, not to mention substantial weapons capabilities, a united Korea would instantly become one of the world’s strongest military powers.  Although Korea may dismantle some of its military might following reunification, it will likely choose to retain most soldiers and employ them in rebuilding Korea.  Reducing troop strength in the near term would add to the country’s unemployed ranks, contributing to instability.
  2. Anti-Americanism will increase in Korea.  One third of Koreans in the united Korea will have lived their entire lives in North Korea, immersed in an anti-American environment.  Coupled with anti-Americanism south of the DMZ, a unified Korea is likely to be more anti-American than South Korea is presently.  Recent protests in Incheon calling for the removal of a statue of American General Douglas MacArthur, who led the famous landing at Incheon during the Korean War, highlights the reality that anti-Americanism exists in South Korea.  Reuniting with North Korea will likely magnify this sentiment.  It could also be inflamed if Korea and the U.S. fail to work out an adequate arrangement on military cooperation (e.g. withdrawing U.S. troops or retaining U.S. military bases in Korea).
  3. Northern and southern Koreans will have difficulty reintegrating into a single culture.  North and South Koreans have been separated by the DMZ since 1953, over 52 years ago.  As time passes, more and more Koreans who lived before the Korean War will pass away.  By the year 2025, virtually no one living on the Korean Peninsula will remember what living in a unified Korea was like.  North Korean and South Korean culture and language have diverged dramatically since the war, and reunification will be even more difficult for Korea than it was in Germany in 1989.  For example, the Korean language in South Korea features over 5,000 common "loan words" (words borrowed primarily from English), while North Korean Korean substitutes these words with indigenous Korean words.  Religion, especially Christianity and Buddhism, are central to South Korean life, whereas North Korea is an officially atheist country where the Great Leader, Kim Sung Il, and the Dear Leader, Kim Jong Il, are virtually deified.  These fundamental cultural differences will make cultural reintegration extremely difficult in the new Korea.  It will likely create mutual resentment between northern and southern Koreans that rivals the resentment Wessies (western Germans) and Ossies (eastern Germans) now feel.
  4. Tourism will fluorish.  The unique reunification of two very different countries will be a boom to Korean tourism.  Because travel in North Korea has been so restricted and the country is so isolated, tourism to North Korea will explode once the country reunites and travel is unrestricted.  The same phenomenon which occurred in Eastern Europe following the fall of the Iron Curtain will occur in united  Korea.  Koreans will travel north and south to see what they now only read in books or see on TV, and foreigners will converge on North Korea to see the "Hermit Kingdom" for themselves. 
  5. A "Gold Rush" mentality will emerge.  The economic disparities between the north and south fuel a rush to develop the north.  In 2004, South Korean per-capita income (est. $19,400) was 14 times that of North Korea.  The disparity will continue to grow so long as the Peninsula remains divided.  The opening of North Korea will present great development opportunities for South Koreans, but it will also lead to potential turf wars.  For example, once the DMZ is dismantled, it will create a giant, undeveloped swath of land cutting across the entire Peninsula.  The DMZ will likely be a major battleground between those who want to move on from the past and develop it, and those who want to preserve its legacy, perhaps as a national park.  North Korea’s urban areas, particularly Pyongyang, Nampo, and Kaesong, will become hot real estate markets, creating sticker shock for former North Koreans.  It is likely that the unified Korean government will retain tight control over development in the former North Korea in order to smooth the reunification process.  Still, there will be a rush from the south to develop the north.
  6. Reunification will come at a big price.  Reunification will be extremely expensive.  A 1999 report by Korean reunification expert Marcus Noland indicated that either $300-$600 billion would be needed to raise North Korean living standards up to 60% of South Korean standards, or 90% of North Koreans would need to move south and integrate into former South Korea.  The World Bank estimates that full economic reunification will cost $2-$3 TRILLION.  Considering that South Korea’s 2004 gross domestic product was $924.1 billion (the 12th largest economy in the world), that is a staggering sum to pay.  Korea will go through significant growing pains as it reintegrates into a single economy.
  7. However, the world will provide South Korea with substantial economic aid.  Unlike Germany, Korea will likely not need to pay fully to economically reintegrate because of the immense burden it must bear.  Tragedies such as Tsunami relief show that the United Nations, World Bank, and individual nations have been instrumental in assisting nations in development efforts (donor nations contributed over $1.8 billion in Tsunami relief).  Successful Korean reintegration is critical to geopolitical stability.  I believe that the UN and the world will be far more generous in helping the two Koreas reunite economically.

Happy Chuseok!

추석 잘 보네세요!  Happy Chuseok to everyone, especially to gyopo (교포), or overseas Koreans, who cannot come home to Korea for the holiday.  We are having a quiet Chuseok get together with some family friends tonight.  My friend’s wife is from Tbilisi, Georgia (former Soviet Republic), so we’ll actually be having authentic Georgian cuisine tonight.  It sounds delicious!  I’ll let you know what we had for dinner.  Because I have the day off tomorrow, on Monday we may get together with some Korean friends for a post-Chuseok party.  It can be difficult to get together with Koreans on Chuseok if you’re not a Korean, because Chuseok, or the Full Moon festival, is a time for Korean families to reunite and spend time with family, both alive and deceased.  The Chinese also celebrate Chuseok and refer to it as Mid-Autumn Festival.  The Koreans, however, have taken the holiday to a whole new level by celebrating it as a day of remembrance.  The closest American holidays are Thanksgiving, when Americans gather with friends and family to celebrate and say thanks, and Memorial Day, when they honor those who have passed.  These holidays are not quite like Chuseok, though.
 
Here is my understanding of Chuseok based on numerous conversations I’ve had with Korean friends.  Chuseok is a lunar holiday that lasts three days, the duration of the full moon during harvest season.  Three days also allow Koreans enough time to reach their destination, celebrate with family, and return home by car.  Traditionally, Koreans return to their ancestral hometown to thank their ancestors for a bountiful harvest.  Because most Koreans no longer farm, the holiday now serves as time for families to reunite and pay respect to their ancestors.  Typically, the patriarch of the extended family who lives in the family’s hometown hosts a large family gathering at his home.   Families also visit their ancestral graveyard, clean up and decorate family grave sites, and have a picnic lunch near the graves of their ancestors, perhaps a grandparent or great-grandparent.   Americans too return to pay respects to their lost loved ones, although we typically do not gather for food at a cemetary.
 
Times have changed, and contemporary realities have also changed Chuseok.  Traffic congestion is a new, unwelcome Chuseok tradition.  Because most Koreans who live in the greater Seoul area hail from elsewhere, the city empties for a few days as families pile into the car and brave horrendous traffic to drive to their hometowns.  Seoul and cities throughout Korea host public Chuseok celebrations for those who remain in the city over the holiday.  Also, because some families’ ancestral homes lie in North Korea, these families have had to establish new, innovative ways to celebrate the holiday.  In addition, for some Koreans, Chuseok is merely an inconvenience.  Frankly, holiday travel isn’t much fun, and some Koreans prefer to not to sit in traffic for hours on end.  In addition, many cemeteries and grave sites in Korea are now tended by professional services.  This is not much different in America, where most cemeteries are manicured.  I would love to head home to the U.S. for Christmas, but because my brother will not be home, and for a few other reasons, we decided not to travel home this Christmas.  We will wait until next summer when the weather is better and traveling is more convenient.
 
Thanks again to everyone who stopped by World Adventurers.  Thank you for posting great comments.  I’ll try to visit your blogs too.  Here are a few responses to some of the questions I received:
 
Note to timeless_traveller:   It’s hard to say exactly why MSN Spaces chose to feature my blog this week, but I am glad they did.  The magic of blogs comes from the freedom it brings in allowing people to express themselves in any way they see fit, whether it be in documenting a travelogue or writing about nothing.  For me, this is a chronicle of our lives overseas as well as a way for me to share some ideas I have.  I think it’s a lot more interesting to rotate topics daily than to focus solely on cataloguing life overseas.
 
Note to AmyKristenI worked for Boeing for several years before I quit to pursue my MBA at the University of Washington in Seattle.  I graduated in 2003 and left Seattle in 2004.  I miss it very much!  I wouldn’t trade this life for the world, though.  I’m living out my dream.  Keep the light on in Seattle!  I’ll probably be back after I retire.
 
Note to Love-is-a-Verb-2How did I set up the language translation?  If you visit http://www.google.com/language_tools, then input your blog’s URL (e.g. http://spaces.msn.com/members/worldadventurers/ and select the language you want it translated into, Google will return a translated version, albeit a rough translation (I hear that the Asian translations are especially bad).  Then paste the resulting link into a list with a title, and the title will appear.  When clicked, the page will be automatically translated by Google. 
 
Note to JenineElisa:  Congratulations on your marriage, your husband’s job offer with SkyWest, happy birthday, and congratulations on 1,000 hits!  I lived in the Seattle area before I started my new job and traveled abroad.  I used to work down in Auburn not far from Federal Way and have spent quality time at Weyerhaeuser in Federal Way.  I really miss Seattle.  I still think it’s the best place in which to live on that side of the Pacific.  I have a question–how did you add a page counter and graphics to your blog header?
 
Note to AngeLine11285 Thanks for all your wonderful comments over the past few months.  I’m really glad you stop by and post great feedback from time to time.  I hope my remarks were positive enough about Korean dramas!  I know you like them.  🙂
 
Note to LyzIf you liked my blog entry on nothing, check the archives for blog entry I wrote in July about things we do unconsciously–like breathing!
 
Note to Rosebay_fl1 Thanks for playing the World Adventurers Game.  OK, maybe it was a little easy to figure out, but I didn’t want to make it too hard.  If I did, no one would figure it out!
 
Note to AnneProm1989Congratulations on recently being featured on "Best of MSN Spaces"!  Thanks too for stopping by for a visit and posting a comment.  If you go to Settings…Statistics, you can check the number of page views.  Before this site was featured on MSN Spaces, it had about 9,500 hits.  Yesterday it logged 7,000 hits and another 1,000 today.  That’s amazing.  Last month, I was excited when World Adventurers had 3,000 hits in one month, but 7,000 in one day is absolutely amazing.  We’ll see how many people visit again after the feature is over.
 
Note to IncognitoCatholicMom Thanks for letting me know about my son’s guestbook.  I’ll have to check out the error.  Congratulations on figuring out the World Adventurers. 🙂  Washington Huskies don’t begrudge the Huskers too much.  As long as your favorite team isn’t the USC Trojans or the Washington State Cougars, you’re OK.  LOL 
 
Note to Insadong Korean RestaurantThanks for the great comments!  You’ve visited World Adventurers for a long time, and I really appreciate it.  It’s my pleasure linking to your blog site.  The next time I’m in Vancouver, BC I will definitely visit your restaurant.  The food looks delicious! 

A Korean drama of a different kind

This is a story worthy of a Korean TV drama.  Korean dramas are well known throughout Asia with fans in many Asian locales, from Singapore to China.  Korean TV dramas are very predictable, yet they remain very popular.  Most Korean dramas, in my own, biased opinion, can be characterized as follows:  1) They play out in too many episodes and could be condensed into three or fewer episodes; 2) They feature too many illnesses and injuries, with serious, improbable medical conditions befalling one or more main characters; 3) They too often feature a love triangles or love quadrangles; 4) The two main protagonists obviously belong together but never end up together; 5) They end so open-ended that they always invite sequels that are never made; 5) They feature characters who are usually more attractive than the average person; 6) They feature overly meddling mothers and mothers-in-law, and 7) They tend of avoid controversial ways to change plots so often employed by American dramas, such as violence or drug abuse.  Hollywood definitely is not alone in its lack of creativity.  I don’t mean to sound overly critical of Korean dramas, because I know many people really enjoy them.  I’ve even watched a few myself.  Since I arrived in Korea, I haven’t been very motivated to watch any, because there are so many other things I find far more entertaining in the Land of the Morning Calm.
 
This story is worthy of being featured in a Korean TV drama.  It would be original and groundbreaking, in my opinion.  It has become so contentious, so controversial, and so personal that it would make an outstanding, award-winning drama.  Of course, it will probably never be made because it is just too real.  The story involves the contentious issue of opening of North Korea to South Korean tourism.  Here is the plot summary: 
 
The Hyundai Group’s founder, who was born in North Korea and a generous benefactor to North Korea, approached North Korea in 1990’s about opening the Hermit Kingdom to South Korean tourism.  Hyundai negotiated with the North Koreans to open up Kumgangsan, North Korea to South Korean tourism.  The new tour, which opened in 2000, is operated by Hyundai Asan, a subsidiary of the Hyundai Group.  Initially a failure, the Kumgangsan tour became a roaring success, attracting its one millionth visitor from South Korea in June 2005.  The Kumgangsan Tour now serves as the centerpiece of an effort by Hyundai to introduce South Korean tourist venues throughout North Korea, from the North Korean up to Wonson to Kaesong to Paektusan in the north. 
 
The plot thickens.  Hyun Jeong-eun, chairwoman of Hyundai Group, is widow of former Hyundai Chairman Chung Mon-hyun, son of Hyundai founder Chung Ju-yun, both of whom committed suicide in 2002 over charges of illegally transferring $500 million to North Korea in 2000.  The secret transfer occurred as part of the agreement with North Korea signed in 1999 to develop the Kumgangsan Tour.  Hyun became Hyundai chairwoman after an internal power struggle between members of the Chung family.  In July 2005, Hyun traveled to North Korea and met with North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, who agreed to open the city of Kaesong and Paektusan, Korea’s most revered mountain, to South Korean tourism.  North Korea granted exclusive right to develop the tours to Hyundai Asan.  Pilot tours to Kaesong from South Korea commenced on August 26, September 2, and September 7.  The August 26 tour is historical because it represented the first time since the 1953 Korean War ceasefire went into effect that Koreans living south of the DMZ could visit Kaesong on tour.  Many South Koreans involved in the tour were born and raised in Kaesong; for them, the tour was a lifelong dream fulfilled.  Tourists visited Songgyungwan, a Confucian school featuring a Koryo museum, and Sonjuk Bridge, where Koryo’s Chong Mong-ju was killed in 1392 by Lee Song-gye, founder of the Chosun Dynasty.  Lucky tourists also visited either Pakyon Falls or the tombs of Koryo kings Kongmin and Wanggon.  In early August 2005, everything looked rosy for Hyundai Asan and the Hyundai Group.
 
Fast forward to the end of the month.  Kim Yoon-Kyu, Hyundai’s primary negotiator with North Korea, is dismissed as CEO of Hyundai Asan by Chairwoman Hyun on charges of embezzlement.  Kim was instrumental in successfully negotiating the opening of Kumgangsan.  Kim was also heavily involved in setting up the pilot tours to Kaesong.  In his place, Hyun named Yoon Man-joon CEO of Hyundai Asan.  The North Koreans reacted angrily to Kim’s dismissal, claiming that it was a personal insult to Kim Jong Il.  They insisted that Kim be reinstated as Hyundai Asan CEO.  Hyun refused.  North Korea responded by slashing the number of tourists allowed to visit Kumgangsan by half.  Last week, North Korean officials went a step further by refusing to meet with Hyun and Yoon while they were at Kumgangsan to celebrate the opening of a new hotel and attend the groundbreaking ceremony for the new Kumgangsan Reunion Center for families separated during the Korean War.  This week the Lotte Group, a rival chaebol (conglomerate), received an unsolicited offer to operate the new Kaesong Tour from the North Korean Asia Pacific Peace Committee, the organization charged with managing South Korea’s tourism projects.  By giving the Kaesong Tour to Lotte, North Korea would trump Hyundai’s plans to solely cultivate tourism in North Korea.
 
And so the drama continues to unfold across the DMZ.  Like a jilted lover, North Korea has turned to a new suitor, the Lotte Group, and is turning its back on longtime partner, Hyundai Asan.  Aware that it cannot control Hyundai’s internal affairs and that South Korean tourism is extremely lucrative, North Korea is doing what it can to influence the situation.  The final episodes of this drama have not yet been broadcast.  The climax is yet to come.  Stay tuned.