THE BELL

There are those who read this news before you.
Subscribe to get the latest articles.
Email
Name
Surname
How would you like to read The Bell
No spam


North Korea is today one of the most totalitarian countries in the world. But it turns out that this closed state has a lot of export items, and very unusual ones.

1. Coal


As everyone knows, China is the world's largest importer of coal. But where does China get millions of tons of this fuel from? It turns out that recently North Korea has become the main supplier of China. Despite a general drop in the level of Chinese imports, shipments from North Korea increased by 25 percent - in May 2015, the country exported 1.8 million tons of coal to China.

Exporting natural resources is a fairly easy way for a totalitarian regime to make money without losing control of the population. Another benefit is that Korea's natural resource exports are not on the UN sanctions list, so the country can make money from coal exports quite legally.

2. Ballistic missiles


North Korea is also known for its provocative ballistic missile launches, which are usually attributed to "evil capitalist machinations." But North Korean ballistic missiles are used not only for this, they are also exported, bringing tens of millions of dollars a year to the DPRK budget. The export of ballistic missiles allows the government to also continue to manufacture missiles for domestic use due to economies of scale.

3. Arms factories


North Korea is one of the most militarized countries in the world, with an army of more than a million people who, accordingly, need to be armed. North Korea's huge arms industry is another way to earn foreign exchange for a cash-strapped nation. The country does not just export heavy weapons, including rocket launchers and anti-aircraft missile systems, but also offers assistance in building weapons factories for its clients.

Over the past 30 years, North Korea has taken part in the construction of two Ethiopian weapons factories and the supply of industrial equipment to this country. Given that the factories were developed in North Korea, only North Korea can provide spare parts for industrial equipment, thus forcing Ethiopia to continue to cooperate with them. North Korea has also built military installations in other African countries such as Nigeria and Madagascar.

4. Statues


North Korea has built a colossal number of statues, as they are one of the means of propaganda in the country. Considering North Korea's outstanding experience in creating statues, other countries even began to order sculptural works from her.

For example, Zimbabwe recently paid $5 million to commission two statues of President Robert Mugabe. Also in North Korea, statues were made to order for Angola, Egypt, Equatorial Guinea, Ethiopia and even Germany. North Korea's largest customer is Namibia, which was awarded a $60 million contract in the early 2000s to build a giant war memorial in Windhoek.

5. Restaurants


Restaurants serving "authentic North Korean food" and traditional dances and songs as entertainment can be found throughout Asia. Interestingly, these restaurants are really Korean - in the 1990s, North Korea opened a whole chain of Pyongyang Restaurant restaurants throughout Asia. This made it possible to kill three birds with one stone: making money for the treasury, funding North Korean embassies in countries where restaurants operate, and money laundering. b

6. Textile


The border between China and North Korea is bustling with economic activity. It is believed that about a quarter of all residents of the Chinese province of Dandong do joint business with the North Koreans. One example of such economic activity is textile factories, which employ exclusively North Koreans. The products of these factories are then transported across the border, where they are labeled "Made in China". Such a demand for manufacturing products in North Korea is not surprising - after all, this country has one of the cheapest labor forces in the world.

7. Counterfeit US banknotes

North Korea is the undisputed leader in the production of counterfeit banknotes. The US has previously claimed that its $100 banknotes are among the most secure in the world. But that hasn't stopped North Korea, which has bought equipment from Japan, paper from Hong Kong and ink from France. The new counterfeit money turned out to be of such high quality that the US had to introduce a new $100 banknote into circulation in 2013.

8. Labor force


What North Korea has in abundance is people. But how can you monetize this “product”? Before North Koreans go abroad, their families are effectively taken hostage to ensure that the money they earn is transferred back to their homeland, as well as the return of workers home. About 50,000 North Korean workers now work abroad, sending remittances totaling nearly $2 billion a year back home.

9 Methamphetamines


North Korea has been dealing drugs since 1970, ever since the country defaulted on its international debt. Initially, Korea took contracts for the transport of drug shipments with the help of diplomats, using diplomatic immunity. Later, North Korea began producing its own drugs, primarily methamphetamine, which it began to trade through its embassies. North Korean methamphetamine is known for its high purity (99 percent).

This is not surprising, given that drugs are produced on state enterprises under the guidance of professional chemists. However, since the mid-2000s, the purity of Korean drugs has drastically declined, but volumes are still on the rise.

10. Nuclear reactors


Probably North Korea's most unexpected export was its attempt to build a fully functioning nuclear reactor for Syria, which Israel bombed in 2007. Had the reactor not been bombed, it could have produced enough plutonium to make one or two atomic bombs every year.

In North Korea, there is also one of those that is worthy of being included in tourist guides.

For the 50,000 North Korean workers who worked in Kaesong, the zone's closure was a blow. Although conservative human rights activists have often referred to the Kaesong zone as a "hard labor camp", such claims are patently hypocritical. Wages in Kaesong are really low by the standards of the developed world: average salary there was $150 a month, and more than half of this amount was withdrawn to the state. However, $50-70 is not bad by the standards of North Korea, so the working zones had every reason to believe that they were extremely lucky. Now their luck has run out.

True, there is hope. There are persistent rumors in Kaesong that in the near future the empty enterprises will be transferred to North Korean private entrepreneurs who will try to establish production there using abandoned South Korean equipment.

Although the phrase "North Korean entrepreneur" may seem strange, in reality private business has existed (and even thrived) in the country of Juche for about two decades. There were times when the DPRK was an almost pure example of a total state economy, but those times are in the past. During the crisis and famine of 1996-1999, the state lost both the opportunity and the desire to fight the private economy, which began to grow slowly.

At first, North Korean entrepreneurs were engaged in small business: they traded in the markets, founded handicraft workshops for the production of consumer goods, and smuggled with China. Over time, quite large private enterprises began to appear in North Korea. In some cases, private investors began to take over state-owned enterprises that stopped working during the crisis years, in the mid and late 1990s.

North Korean stalls

At the same time, the attitude of the authorities to what was happening remained extremely contradictory. On the one hand, by 2000, private business had become an important element of the economy. It was he who played big role The fact is that the crisis was finally overcome, and from about 2002-2003 the DPRK economy began to grow again, although not too fast. On the other hand, the country's leadership under Kim Jong Il perceived private business as something fundamentally wrong or, at best, as a temporary phenomenon that had to be put up with in times of crisis. Under Kim Jong Il, from time to time campaigns against private business were carried out, which, however, ended in nothing.

With the coming to power of Kim Jong-un in December 2011, the situation has changed. For all his temper and eccentricity, the new North Korean ruler has a very positive attitude towards private business, so after 2012 the North Korean authorities on the ground received an unequivocal instruction to no longer interfere in the affairs of private entrepreneurs and merchants if possible.

However, this does not change the fact that, from a formal point of view, private business remains completely illegal. Despite the fact that now in North Korea almost all public catering and retail, a significant part of intercity road transport, as well as a number of small and medium-sized food and light industry enterprises, it is strictly forbidden to mention this in the official press (and there is no other in the country).

Small workshops and stalls do without formalities, and larger private enterprises, such as restaurants, are formally registered as state property. At the same time, a significant part of what is happening at these enterprises, from a formal point of view, is a brazen violation of the law and theft of socialist property, so that not only the prosperity, but also the survival of entrepreneurs depends on the goodwill of local officials, which can be bought, and the current position of the highest guide that is not for sale.

Nevertheless, it was the closure of the Kaesong zone that aroused considerable hopes among entrepreneurs. As a result of the measures taken by Seoul, more than a hundred enterprises with first-class equipment by North Korean standards and well-trained personnel have become ownerless, and now North Korean businesses are actively working to gain access to suddenly appeared opportunities. Of course, the guilds will operate, as always, under a formal roof public institutions. There is no doubt that if he succeeds, the “closed” zone will continue to operate, perhaps with less efficiency than before, but perhaps with greater benefit to most North Koreans.

The DPRK's foreign relations are limited: the policy of isolationism has led to the fact that the country has less than a dozen trading partners. Large deliveries are made to China, Egypt and Iran. European countries do not conduct active trade with the republic - they account for less than 2% of the turnover. The aggressive policy of North Korea has led to the tightening of trade sanctions, which weaken the already underdeveloped economy of the state.

Industry of the DPRK

North Korean enterprises are aimed at meeting the internal needs of the state. They mainly produce clothing and footwear, household chemicals, and furniture. Difficulties arise in the production of food products. The climate and natural conditions of the DPRK lead to low yields: drought alternates with floods, and 80% of the territory is occupied by rocky infertile soils.

In the last thirty years, the country has been focusing on the development of heavy industry. Due to the low economic level and limited resources, movement in this direction has been slowed down.

Attention is paid to such industries:

  • energy production;
  • coal;
  • engineering.

However, none of the areas is not developed so well that products can be exported. The situation is better with light goods.

In this regard, the DPRK has succeeded in the following areas:

  • textile and haberdashery industry;
  • processing bauxite into aluminum;
  • production of accessories for everyday purposes.

The rest of the needs of the DPRK are provided by foreign supplies - mainly Chinese. The country needs to import food, medicines, fuel. Due to disagreements with the world community and the imposition of sanctions against the country, the supply of humanitarian aid was stopped.

Official export in North Korea

The World Bank provided information according to which the trade turnover of the DPRK in 2011 is 3.7 billion dollars. Over 60% trading operations produced in China, but in the last decade this figure has been declining. The country is one of the twenty largest exporters of seafood - a quarter of all export money comes from this industry.

The following positions are occupied by light industry, machinery, metals and minerals. Demand is also found in the sale of ginseng, deer antlers, medicinal herbs and other specific products used in folk medicine.

North Korea carries out large deliveries of weapons to third world countries, mainly African. Since they also fall under the sanctions policy, such exports cannot be called illegal.

World political forces, however, speak out negatively about deals of this kind. North Korea does not produce new weapons in sufficient quantities, so modernized models of Chinese and Soviet designs are sent for export.

Black market

In addition to official deliveries, the DPRK carries out shadow economic activity. Of course, there were no government statements in this regard. However, on the global underground market there is a product conditionally labeled “made in the DPRK”, and it is far from always legal.

The most frequently mentioned categories are:

  • Medicines, including drugs. The black market resells drugs intended for residents as part of a humanitarian program, as well as funds seized for profit from public hospitals. North Korea is rumored to be smuggling methamphetamine, which is 99% "purity".
  • Cheap labor . Residents of the DPRK travel on voluntary terms to neighboring countries - China and Russia. Wage scanty, but by the standards of the country is worth the risk. At the same time, up to 80% of the amount is taken by the state.
  • Human trafficking . Refugees confirm rumors that consignments of women are regularly sent to China and forced into prostitution. Up to 40% of women refugees in South Korea decided to emigrate illegally precisely for this reason.

In addition, the DPRK has a dubious reputation for counterfeiting. There is no official confirmation of these facts, but there are statements in the Western media that large amounts of counterfeit banknotes produced in the DPRK are being withdrawn from circulation.

President Donald Trump met with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un yesterday US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said last month that American companies will be able to invest in an isolated country if the summit is successful. Who will invest in North Korea?

There are big doubts about whether the terms of the agreement will be honored, but even if the meeting results in a breakthrough, experts say investors should be especially wary of North Korea. And if anyone is moving faster in this direction, it is most likely China.

"Potentially Profitable"

Securities in North Korea have some attractive features for foreign companies. It is located in the middle of Asian countries including China, South Korea and Japan.

“There are many potentially profitable and very interesting areas for investment in North Korea”, said Peter Ward, a researcher at Seoul National University who studies North Korea.

According to country experts, North Korea's population is poor but fairly well educated, and the cost of labor force much lower than its neighbors. Some analysts say it is a potential hub for electronics and textiles.

But these advantages pale in comparison to the many obstacles to foreign investors, especially the brutal Kim regime.

"Perspective major investments that the regime in North Korea will allow is unlikely, said Go Myung-hyun, a research fellow at the Asan Institute for Policy Studies, a think tank in Seoul. — The regime is deeply suspicious of the international market.”

China will lead

As North Korea's largest trading partner and a major sponsor of the regime, China could take the lead in investing in the country.

Researcher Peter Ward said North Korea looked like a natural candidate for the Belt and Road Initiative, a grandiose plan to invest hundreds of billions in roads, ports and railways from Asia to Africa. According to experts, the infrastructure in most of North Korea is in a dilapidated state.

“North Korea may be very reluctant to allow China to forcibly take possession of future “troubled assets,” Ward said.

Bad reputation

In the 1980s, Pyongyang defaulted on loans from European and Australian banks. More recently, companies that have tried to work with him have run into problems.

In the late 2000s, the Egyptian conglomerate Orascom was invited to create joint venture with the North Korean government to build the first cellular network.

For several years, the company faced difficulties, including the fact that the transfer of profits from North Korea and Pyongyang was not allowed. In its 2015 financial report, Orascom simply wrote that "control over the activities of the joint venture was lost." Few details have been made public about his fate. Orascom did not respond to a request for comment on this matter.

South Korean companies also struggled. In 1998, the Hyundai Group began operating a mountain resort for tourists in North Korea. The complex attracted 2 million visitors from South Korea for 10 years before a North Korean attendant killed a tourist, prompting the closure of the resort. The project has since been confiscated by Pyongyang.

"They've lost everything. Go Myung-hyun said referring to Hyundai. — The company no longer has access to North Korea.”

Despite this experience, the Hyundai group has created target group to prepare for a potential return to the country. And Samsung Securities, the investment arm of another major South Korean conglomerate, said Thursday it is setting up a research team to analyze potential future investment in North Korea.

Prize catch?

The two Koreas also cooperated in Kaesong, a special economic zone where North Korean workers produced goods for South Korean companies. But Ward said many South Korean companies have agreed to operate in the zone on the North Korean side of the border because of guarantees and support from the government in Seoul.

On February 10, 2016, South Korea announced the cessation of work in the Kaesong Industrial Zone after North Korea tested a long-range missile.

Experts offer several reasons why the North Korean regime might scare away foreign investors.

Some say the authorities are concerned that the spread of market capitalism is destroying the power of the regime, or that companies may start a group fight with the government.

Others say North Korea's closed economy means officials don't know exactly what is considered acceptable practice for business partners.

« They think of themselves as winning in international markets, Ward said. — They don't seem to understand that alienating investors willy-nilly lead to a very bad reputation.».

Reviews
foreign trade Russia

Foreign trade of Russia with the DPRK (North Korea) in the 1st half of 2018

Prepared by Foreign Trade of Russia website
based on data from the Federal Customs Service of Russia

Report on Russia's foreign trade with the DPRK (North Korea) in the first half of 2018: trade turnover, exports, imports, structure, goods, dynamics.

Trade between Russia and the DPRK (North Korea)

In the 1st half of 2018, the trade turnover between Russia and the DPRK (North Korea) was $10,985,426, down 82.04% ($50,185,618) compared to the same period in 2017.

Russian exports to the DPRK (North Korea) in the 1st half of 2018 was $10,081,548, down 83.00% ($49,237,201) compared to the same period in 2017.

Imports of Russia from the DPRK (North Korea) in the 1st half of 2018 was $903,878, down 51.20% ($948,417) compared to the same period in 2017.

Trade balance of Russia with the DPRK (North Korea) in the 1st half of 2018 was positive in the amount of USD 9,177,670. Compared to the same period in 2017, the surplus decreased by 84.03% (USD 48,288,784).

The share of the DPRK (North Korea) in the foreign trade turnover of Russia in the 1st half of 2018 amounted to 0.0033% against 0.0228% in the same period in 2017. According to the share in the Russian trade turnover in the 1st half of 2018, the DPRK (North Korea) took 148th place (in the 1st half of 2017 - 109th place).

The share of the DPRK (North Korea) in Russia's exports in the 1st half of 2018 amounted to 0.0047% against 0.0355% in the same period in 2017. In terms of the share in Russian exports in the 1st half of 2018, the DPRK (North Korea) took 132nd place (in the 1st half of 2017 - 92nd place).

The share of the DPRK (North Korea) in Russian imports in the 1st half of 2018 amounted to 0.0008% against 0.0018% in the same period in 2017. In terms of the share in Russian imports in the 1st half of 2018, the DPRK (North Korea) ranked 139th (in the 1st half of 2017 - 127th place).

Russian export to the DPRK (North Korea)

In the structure of Russian exports to the DPRK (North Korea) in the 1st half of 2018 (and in the 1st half of 2017), the main share of deliveries fell on the following types of goods:

  • Mineral products (TN VED codes 25-27) - 63.27% of Russia's total exports to the DPRK (North Korea) (in the 1st half of 2017 - 86.23%);
  • Food products and agricultural raw materials (TN VED codes 01-24) - 28.25% of Russia's total exports to the DPRK (North Korea) (in the 1st half of 2017 - 9.85%);
  • Products chemical industry(TN VED codes 28-40) - 6.94% of the total volume of Russian exports to the DPRK (North Korea) (in the 1st half of 2017 - 0.58%);
  • Metals and products from them (TN VED codes 72-83) - 1.37% of the total volume of Russian exports to the DPRK (North Korea) (in the 1st half of 2017 - 1.63%);
  • Machinery, equipment and vehicles(TN VED codes 84-90) - 0.15% of the total volume of Russian exports to the DPRK (North Korea) (in the 1st half of 2017 - 1.25%).

The largest increase in Russian exports to the DPRK (North Korea) in the 1st half of 2018 compared to the 1st half of 2017 was recorded for the following product groups:

  • Pharmaceutical products (TN VED code 30) - an increase of $524,900;
  • Fats and oils of animal or vegetable origin and their cleavage products; ready dietary fats; waxes of animal or vegetable origin (HS code 15) - an increase of USD 223,890;
  • Oilseeds and fruits; other seeds, fruits and grains; medicinal plants and plants for technical purposes; straw and fodder (TN VED code 12) - an increase of $172,751;
  • Ferrous metal products (TN VED code 73) - an increase of USD 116,231.

The largest reduction in Russian exports to the DPRK (North Korea) in the 1st half of 2018 compared to the 1st half of 2017 was recorded for the following commodity groups:

  • Mineral fuel, oil and products of their distillation; bituminous substances; mineral waxes (TN VED code 27) - reduction by USD 44,653,533;
  • Fish and crustaceans, molluscs and other aquatic invertebrates (HS code 03) - reduction by USD 2,327,000;
  • Ferrous metals (TN VED code 72) - reduction by $929,898;
  • Products of the flour-grinding industry; malt; starches; inulin; wheat gluten (HS code 11) - a reduction of $780,876;
  • Nuclear reactors, boilers, equipment and mechanical devices; their parts​ (HS code 84) - reduction by USD 373,921;
  • Means of land transport, except for railway or tram rolling stock, and their parts and accessories (TN VED code 87) - reduction by USD 222,501;
  • Wood and products from it; charcoal​ (TN VED code 44) - reduction by $199,795;
  • Cereals (TN VED code 10) - reduction by USD 158,366;
  • Electrical machines and equipment, their parts; sound recording and reproducing equipment, equipment for recording and reproducing television image and sound, their parts and accessories (HS code 85) - reduction by USD 123,644;
  • Salt; sulfur; earth and stone; plastering materials, lime and cement (TN VED code 25) - a reduction of $120,984;
  • Fertilizers (TN VED code 31) - reduction by USD 94,050;
  • Alcoholic and soft drinks and vinegar (HS code 22) - a reduction of $67,828;
  • Rubber, rubber and articles thereof (HS code 40) - reduction by USD 41,620;
  • Sugar and confectionery from sugar (TN VED code 17) - a reduction of USD 31,322.
Russian exports to the DPRK (North Korea) in the 1st half of 2018 by commodity groups
The code
TN VED
Product group name Export in 1st half. 2018,
USD
Share in total exports,
%
Export in 1st half. 2017
USD
Changes in
1 floor 2018
relatively
1 floor 2017
%
02 Meat and edible meat offal 70 0,00 0
03 Fish and crustaceans, mollusks and other aquatic invertebrates 0 0,00 2 327 000 -100,00
04 Milk products; bird eggs; natural honey; food products animal origin, not elsewhere specified or included 0 0,00 16 440 -100,00
09 Coffee, tea, mate, or Paraguayan tea, and spices 4 0,00 0
10 Cereals 25 432 0,25 183 798 -86,16
11 Products of the flour-grinding industry; malt; starches; inulin; wheat gluten 921 471 9,14 1 702 347 -45,87
12 Oilseeds and fruits; other seeds, fruits and grains; medicinal plants and plants for technical purposes; straw and fodder 183 251 1,82 10 500 1 645,25
15 Fats and oils of animal or vegetable origin and their cleavage products; prepared edible fats; waxes of animal or vegetable origin 1 658 117 16,45 1 434 227 15,61
17 Sugar and sugar confectionery 49 988 0,50 81 310 -38,52
21 Miscellaneous food products 8 928 0,09 17 874 -50,05
22 Alcoholic and non-alcoholic drinks and vinegar 261 0,00 68 089 -99,62
24 Tobacco and industrial tobacco substitutes 131 0,00 0
25 80 592 0,80 201 576 -60,02
27 Mineral fuel, oil and products of their distillation; bituminous substances; mineral waxes 6 298 189 62,47 50 951 722 -87,64
28 Products of inorganic chemistry; inorganic or organic compounds of precious metals, rare earth metals, radioactive elements or isotopes 0 0,00 207 -100,00
29 organic chemical compounds 0 0,00 14 318 -100,00
30 Pharmaceutical products 643 773 6,39 118 873 441,56
31 fertilizers 0 0,00 94 050 -100,00
32 Tanning or dyeing extracts; tannins and their derivatives; dyes, pigments and other coloring matter; paints and varnishes; putties and other mastics; printing ink, ink, ink 0 0,00 1 322 -100,00
34 Soap, surfactant organic matter, detergents, lubricants, artificial and prepared waxes, cleaning or polishing compounds, candles and similar articles, modeling pastes, plasticine, "dental wax" and plaster-based dental preparations 18 984 0,19 42 055 -54,86
38 Other chemical products 2 438 0,02 10 116 -75,90
39 24 239 0,24 13 036 85,94
40 10 712 0,11 52 332 -79,53
42 0 0,00 202 -100,00
44 Wood and products from it; charcoal 0 0,00 199 795 -100,00
48 Paper and cardboard; articles of paper pulp, paper or paperboard 0 0,00 17 654 -100,00
52 Cotton 0 0,00 540 -100,00
54 Chemical threads; flat and similar threads of chemical textile materials 0 0,00 3 174 -100,00
59 0 0,00 5 728 -100,00
62 2 119 0,02 4 001 -47,04
63 0 0,00 10 993 -100,00
64 0 0,00 3 967 -100,00
65 Hats and their parts 0 0,00 193 -100,00
68 0 0,00 2 549 -100,00
70 Glass and glass products 0 0,00 3 195 -100,00
72 Black metals 21 0,00 929 919 -100,00
73 Ferrous metal products 137 468 1,36 21 237 547,30
74 Copper and products from it 202 0,00 13 132 -98,46
76 Aluminum and products from it 0 0,00 38 -100,00
82 0 0,00 1 024 -100,00
83 Other articles of base metal 0 0,00 2 180 -100,00
84 5 000 0,05 378 921 -98,68
85 0 0,00 123 644 -100,00
86 Railway or tramway locomotives, rolling stock and parts thereof; track equipment and devices for railways or tramways and their parts; mechanical (including electromechanical) signaling equipment of all kinds 0 0,00 7 081 -100,00
87 0 0,00 222 501 -100,00
90 10 158 0,10 8 895 14,20
94 Furniture; bedding, mattresses, mattress supports, cushions and similar stuffed furnishings; lamps and lighting fittings, not elsewhere specified or included; illuminated signs, illuminated name or address or address plates and the like; prefabricated building structures 0 0,00 15 103 -100,00
96 Miscellaneous finished products 0 0,00 1 891 -100,00

Russian imports from the DPRK (North Korea)

In the structure of Russian imports from the DPRK (North Korea) in the 1st half of 2018 (and in the 1st half of 2017), the main share of deliveries fell on the following types of goods:

  • Products of the chemical industry (HS codes 28-40) - 19.68% of Russia's total imports from the DPRK (North Korea) (in the 1st half of 2017 - 31.01%);
  • Machinery, equipment and vehicles (TN VED codes 84-90) - 14.32% of Russia's total imports from the DPRK (North Korea) (in the 1st half of 2017 - 10.72%);
  • Metals and products from them (TN VED codes 72-83) - 0.85% of Russia's total imports from the DPRK (North Korea) (in the 1st half of 2017 - 19.78%);
  • Textiles and footwear (HS codes 50-67) - 0.70% of Russia's total imports from the DPRK (North Korea) (in the 1st half of 2017 - 22.39%).

The largest increase in Russian imports from the DPRK (North Korea) in the 1st half of 2018 compared to the 1st half of 2017 was recorded for the following product groups:

  • musical instruments; their parts and accessories (TN VED code 92) - an increase of USD 297,685;
  • Plastics and articles thereof (HS code 39) - an increase of USD 9,052.

The largest reduction in Russian imports from the DPRK (North Korea) in the 1st half of 2018 compared to the 1st half of 2017 was recorded for the following product groups:

  • Articles of clothing and clothing accessories, except knitted or crocheted (TN VED code 62) - reduction by USD 371,554;
  • Other chemical products (TN VED code 38) - reduction by USD 358,061;
  • Products from ferrous metals (HS code 73) - reduction by USD 189,475;
  • Ferrous metals (TN VED code 72) - reduction by USD 164,335;
  • Essential oils and resinoids; perfumes, cosmetics or toilet preparations (HS code 33) - a reduction of USD 46,767;
  • Articles of clothing and clothing accessories, knitted or crocheted (HS code 61) - reduction by USD 35,059;
  • Means of land transport, except for railway or tram rolling stock, and their parts and accessories (TN VED code 87) - reduction by USD 29,679;
  • Electrical machines and equipment, their parts; sound recording and reproducing equipment, equipment for recording and reproducing television image and sound, their parts and accessories (HS code 85) - reduction by USD 24,471;
  • Nuclear reactors, boilers, equipment and mechanical devices; their parts​ (TN VED code 84) - reduction by USD 12,152;
  • Salt; sulfur; earth and stone; plastering materials, lime and cement (TN VED code 25) - a reduction of $8,265;
  • Nickel and articles made from it (HS code 75) - reduction by USD 3,676;
  • Articles made of stone, plaster, cement, asbestos, mica or similar materials (TN VED code 68) - reduction by USD 3,097;
  • Optical, photographic, cinematographic, measuring, checking, precision, medical or surgical instruments and apparatus; their parts and accessories (TN VED code 90) - reduction by USD 2,826.
Imports of Russia from the DPRK (North Korea) in the 1st half of 2018 by commodity groups
The code
TN VED
Product group name Import in 1st floor 2018,
USD
Share in total import,
%
Import in 1st floor 2017
USD
Changes in
1 floor 2018
relatively
1 floor 2017
%
25 Salt; sulfur; earth and stone; plastering materials, lime and cement 0 0,00 8 265 -100,00
33 Essential oils and resinoids; perfumery, cosmetic or toilet preparations 445 0,05 47 212 -99,06
35 Protein substances; modified starches; adhesives; enzymes 4 200 0,46 4 809 -12,66
37 Photo and film products 0 0,00 62 -100,00
38 Other chemical products 0 0,00 358 061 -100,00
39 Plastics and products made from them 173 048 19,15 163 996 5,52
40 Rubber, rubber and articles thereof 197 0,02 341 -42,23
42 Leather products; saddlery and harness; travel accessories, handbags and similar goods; products from animal intestines (except silkworm fibroin fiber) 426 0,05 183 132,79
55 Chemical fibers 1 527 0,17 0
56 Wadding, felt or felt and non-woven materials; special yarn; twine, cordage, ropes and cables and articles thereof 0 0,00 237 -100,00
59 Textile materials, impregnated, coated or laminated; technical textiles 0 0,00 7 -100,00
60 Knitted or crocheted fabrics 0 0,00 1 613 -100,00
61 Articles of clothing and clothing accessories, knitted or crocheted 4 549 0,50 39 608 -88,51
62 Articles of clothing and clothing accessories, other than knitted or crocheted 0 0,00 371 554 -100,00
63 Other finished textile products; sets; used clothing and textiles; rags 244 0,03 585 -58,29
64 Footwear, gaiters and similar articles; their details 0 0,00 1 207 -100,00
68 Articles of stone, plaster, cement, asbestos, mica or similar materials 0 0,00 3 097 -100,00
69 Ceramic products 49 0,01 310 -84,19
72 Black metals 3 618 0,40 167 953 -97,85
73 Ferrous metal products 4 089 0,45 193 564 -97,89
74 Copper and products from it 0 0,00 70 -100,00
75 Nickel and products from it 0 0,00 3 676 -100,00
82 Tools, utensils, cutlery, spoons and forks of base metal; their parts of base metal 0 0,00 1 033 -100,00
84 Nuclear reactors, boilers, equipment and mechanical devices; their parts 1 348 0,15 13 500 -90,01
85 Electrical machines and equipment, their parts; sound recording and reproducing apparatus, apparatus for recording and reproducing television images and sound, parts and accessories thereof 25 041 2,77 49 512 -49,42
87 Means of land transport, other than railway or tram rolling stock, and their parts and accessories 102 292 11,32 131 971 -22,49
90 Optical, photographic, cinematographic, measuring, checking, precision, medical or surgical instruments and apparatus; their parts and accessories 744 0,08 3 570 -79,16
92 musical instruments; their parts and accessories 581 376 64,32 283 691 104,93
95 Toys, games and sports equipment; their parts and accessories 313 0,03 1 778 -82,40
96 Miscellaneous finished products 372 0,04 830 -55,18

Russian foreign trade statistics
Federal customs Service Russia

THE BELL

There are those who read this news before you.
Subscribe to get the latest articles.
Email
Name
Surname
How would you like to read The Bell
No spam