Delegations from the reclusive nation have been visiting Vietnam over the last three years and they are “very interested” in the economic transition of the Southeast Asian country, said Le Dang Doanh, a former advisor to the Vietnamese prime minister.
They also studied how Vietnam managed to normalize political and economic ties with Washington, said Doanh, who is now senior fellow at the economic college of Hanoi National University.
According to a report on CNBC, North Korea has been closely studying market reforms in Vietnam and their impact on political stability, a former Vietnamese government advisor said on Monday.
Delegations from the reclusive nation have been visiting Vietnam over the last three years and they are “very interested” in the economic transition of the Southeast Asian country, said Le Dang Doanh, a former advisor to the Vietnamese prime minister.
The North Korean teams wanted to know how Hanoi prepared and carried out reforms, as well as the political implications that such changes brought about, Doanh told CNBC’s Chery Kang on Monday.
U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jung Un are due to meet in Hanoi on Wednesday and Thursday. It will be their second summit following last June’s meeting in Singapore. The key issues on the table will be the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula, as well as sanctions on Pyongyang, which have taken a toll on the North’s economy.
The North Korean delegations also studied how Vietnam managed to normalize political and economic relations with Washington, said Doanh, who is now senior fellow at the economic college of Hanoi National University.
A series of reforms undertaken in the 1980s and 1990s paved the way for communist-controlled Vietnam to re-enter the global market and become one the region’s fastest growing economies.
Even in the midst of reforms, the Southeast Asia nation has managed to retain tight control over its people and economy, and is widely touted as a potential model for Pyongyang to follow.
Vietnam’s economic transition has managed to “mobilize the whole dynamism, the creativity and deliver the determination of the Vietnamese people to come to develop,” said Doanh. “I think it is a very good experience for North Korea.”
However, he cautioned: “Reform is a difficult process — some gain or benefit, (others) will lose power.”
North Korea’s Kim has allowed some markets in his country to develop, introduced more Special Economic Zones and called for factories to expand their product ranges to cater for diverse consumer tastes.
By Huileng Tan, reported on CNBC — Reuters contributed to this report.