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¡°°³¼º°ø´Ü Æó¼âÇؾߡ± WSJ

±Û¾´ÀÌ : ÀÓÁöȯ ³¯Â¥ : 2013-04-11 (¸ñ) 12:55:02



¿ù½ºÆ®¸®Æ®Àú³Î(WSJ)ÀÌ ¹Ú±ÙÇý ´ëÅë·É¿¡°Ô °³¼º°ø´ÜÀÇ Æó¼â(øÍáð)¸¦ ÁÖ¹®ÇÏ°í ³ª¼¹´Ù.

 

WSJ´Â 10ÀÏ ¡®Good Riddance to Kaesong(°³¼º°úÀÇ ÁÁÀº ÀÛº°)' Á¦ÇÏÀÇ »ç¼³À» ÅëÇØ ¡°±èÁ¤Àº Á¤±ÇÀÇ ¿¬Àå¿¡ µµ¿òÀ» ÁÖ´Â °³¼º°ø´ÜÀ» ºÏÇÑÀÌ Â÷´ÜÇѸ¸Å­ ÀÌ ±âȸ¸¦ È°¿ëÇØ ¿µ¿øÈ÷ Æó¼âÇؾ߸¸ ÇÑ´Ù¡±¸ç °­°æº¸¼ö¾ð·ÐÀ¸·Î¼­ÀÇ »ö並 µå·¯³Â´Ù.

 

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Good Riddance to Kaesong <WSJ>

 

Pyongyang blocked South Korean managers and supplies from reaching the Kaesong Industrial Complex last week, and on Tuesday the North's workers "boycotted" the special economic zone. This is one more part of Kim Jong Eun's plan to create a crisis to force Seoul and Washington to sue for peace by paying blackmail to Pyongyang. Instead, South Korean President Park Geun-hye should seize this opportunity to declare Kaesong a misguided experiment and shut it down for good.

 

Kaesong opened in 2004 as part of the "sunshine policy" of engagement with the North pursued by former South Korean Presidents Kim Dae Jung and Roh Moo Hyun. Some 123 companies employ 53,000 workers in a city-sized area north of the Demilitarized Zone opposite Seoul.

 

At the time, many South Koreans still believed that the North might respond to peaceful overtures and pursue Chinese-style economic reforms. Very few remain so naive after the North torpedoed a South Korean ship and shelled a fishing village in 2010. Hopes that the North's young new leader would rein in the military and encourage private enterprise were dashed over the past year.

 

Kaesong might have a better claim as a model for the North if it followed the South's labor laws. Instead the companies pay wages directly to the government, which lets workers keep a small fraction. That may still be more than most in the North earn. But then the workers are also hand-picked by the government, no doubt for their political loyalty.

 

Experts on the North's mercurial ways speculate that it is squeezing Kaesong to prove that it doesn't depend on the foreign exchange income earned there. Perhaps Pyongyang's leaders were insulted by South Korean media reports to that effect. The illusion of the North's superiority over the capitalist South must be maintained at any cost, so Pyongyang claims it was doing the South a favor by providing cheap labor.

 

Back in the real world, the complex brings in $90 million in wages annually, and South Korean firms have invested a total of $845 million so far. Those are considerable sums for an impoverished totalitarian regime that in 2011 imported goods worth $4 billion. The South currently provides less than $20 million in humanitarian aid annually.

 

Kaesong provides the North with access to another valuable commodity: hostages. Some 400 South Koreans are still inside the complex, and while there is no indication so far that they can't leave, their presence gives Seoul less room to maneuver. The companies that have invested there are also a vocal lobby for avoiding any action that might offend Pyongyang.

 

President Park warned Tuesday that the suspension of operations at Kaesong would deter future investment in the North. That's true, but it doesn't go far enough. She has been handed an opening to call the North's bluff and order the South Korean employees to come home. Paying off the companies for their lost investment would be a small price to remove this prop for a murderous regime.

 

 


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