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A Capitalist in North Korea: My Seven Years in the Hermit Kingdom Kindle Edition
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In 2002, the Swiss power company ABB appointed Felix Abt its country director for North Korea. The Swiss Entrepreneur lived and worked in North Korea for seven years, one of the few foreign businessmen there. After the experience, Abt felt compelled to write A Capitalist in North Korea to describe the multifaceted society he encountered.
North Korea, at the time, was heavily sanctioned by the UN which made it extremely difficult to do business. Yet he discovered that it was a place where plastic surgery and South Korean TV dramas were wildly popular and where he rarely needed to walk more than a block to grab a quick hamburger. He was closely monitored and once faced accusations of spying, yet he learned that young North Koreans are hopeful--signing up for business courses in anticipation of a brighter, more open, future. In A Capitalist in North Korea, Abt shares these and many other unusual facts and insights about one of the world's most secretive nations.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherTuttle Publishing
- Publication dateMay 28, 2014
- File size13795 KB
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"No one has [Felix Abt's] credentials: seven years of unparalleled access to most levels of North Koreans in the central government and seven of nine provinces, founder of a Pyongyang Business School and first President of the Pyongyang European Business Association. This "capitalist" attacks conventional wisdom on North Korea; sometimes with blunt force, sometimes with nuance, but always with a businessman's eye and always with a fiery, humor-tempered wit. Indeed, the personal pictures and lively pace of the book combine the feel of a fireside chat with facts one expects from a businessman." --Roger Cavazos, Associate, The Nautilus Institute
"It's rare indeed to get an insider perspective from one of these agents of change." --Foreign Policy in Focus
"The Swiss-born Abt, who lived and worked in Pyongyang from 22 to 29, is one of a small number of Western businesspeople who encourage economic engagement with North Korea." --Vice News
"Felix Abt prefers to stay apolitical and impartial when sharing his thoughts and memories of the seven-year sojourn. From the book we can see that he loves Korea and cares about its people. In his assessments of North Korea's past and present the author approaches all issues from a human (and humanistic) perspective, trying to show life in the country without political or ideological coloring."--Leonid Petrov, lecturer in Korean Studies, The University of Sydney
"Abt Draws from a trove of personal experience to create a vivid account of the people and place. Along the way, Abt addresses big questions such as economic reform and practical ones such as how to use e-commerce to achieve brand recognition in North Korea."--Jeff Baron, U.S. - Korea Institute at Sais
"…the book is also peppered with interesting anecdotes and stories about cultural and private life in the DPRK that do not typically receive attention in the western media."--Curtis Melvin, blogger, North Korea Economy Watch --This text refers to the hardcover edition.
About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : B00KVMIS24
- Publisher : Tuttle Publishing; 1st edition (May 28, 2014)
- Publication date : May 28, 2014
- Language : English
- File size : 13795 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 334 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,839,157 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #299 in History of Korea
- #337 in North Korean History
- #377 in South Korean History
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Felix Abt is a serial entrepreneur and, periodically, a coach, trainer and consultant. During his career, he has developed and managed a variety of businesses in different countries. He worked as a senior executive at multinational corporations such as the Swiss-Swedish ABB Group, a global leader in automation and power technologies; the F. Hoffmann-La Roche Group, a global leader in healthcare and the Zuellig Group Inc., a leading Asian distribution and trading group. He also worked with smaller and medium-sized enterprises, in both mature and new markets.
He also feels privileged to have had the opportunity to strengthen his expertise as an investor and director of multiple companies. Thus far, he has lived and worked in nine countries, including Vietnam and North Korea, on three different continents.
His basis for going abroad was to learn and observe, not to pass judgment and not to propagate his personal views or to lecture – or even “liberate” – other people.
Furthermore, he is glad that he could gain experience in capacity building, by organizing and carrying out a diverse range of training courses, from Spain to Egypt to Ivory Coast to North Korea and Vietnam. He was pleased to see a number of his former employees in these countries become successful entrepreneurs in their own rights.
He also became a lobbyist (against all odds) as president of the first foreign chamber of commerce in North Korea, advocating for reforms and a level-playing field for all businesses and against strangulating sanctions by foreign powers. His first book 'A Capitalist in North Korea: My Seven Years in the Hermit Kingdom' echoes his experiences there. It was both the most exciting and the most challenging period of his career. It was also highly rewarding to witness first hand, and sometimes even contribute to, MANY FIRSTS that nobody would have expected from the world's most isolated, under-reported and misrepresented country:
The first fast food restaurant selling 'happy meals', the first café selling Western gourmet coffee; the first miniskirts and high heels; the first Mickey Mouse and Hello Kitty bags; the legalization of markets and advertising; the first North Korean debit card, with which he went shopping; the first technocrats, rather than party committees, running state-enterprises; a foodstuff company's first robot, made by ABB, a multinational group for which he was the chief representative in Pyongyang; the multiplication of all sorts of small private business; the development of private farming; the emergence of a middle class and a drop in poverty; cosmetic surgery in the capital, even though it was illegal, people watching foreign movies and reading foreign books, despite censorship; the first business school, which he co-founded and ran; the first e-commerce, set up by North Korean painters and himself, selling their paintings around the globe; the first North Koreans dancing Rock 'n Roll, with him; the first foreign chamber of commerce, which he co-founded and chaired; the first North Korean enterprise, a pharmaceutical factory which he ran as CEO, winning contracts in competitive bidding against foreign companies; the first quality pharmacy chain which he launched; the first software joint venture company exporting award-winning medical software, which he co-founded, and many more.
His biggest disappointment in North Korea was that his pet project, electrifying North Korean provinces far from the capital to lift millions of North Koreans from poverty, was thwarted by the actions of foreign powers.
His biggest satisfaction was to have contributed to the prevention of accidents and to save miners' lives by helping to modernize North Korean mines and to save countless more lives of North Korean patients thanks to locally made quality medicine at affordable prices, before foreign-imposed sanctions sabotaged these endeavors.
Felix Abt was a shareholder of several legitimate Joint Venture companies in North Korea (medicine, food, garments and software) which have been driven into bankruptcy by U.N. "sanctions" from the mid-2010.
Abt considers himself a politically neutral businessman and, therefore, does not share partisan views about North Korea. He is, however, critical of biased North Korea reporting and does what he can to contribute to a more objective view of the country. He knows, from direct personal experience, the true state of affairs in North Korea much better than the journalists, bloggers, podcasters and pundits who love to prate about it, often with little factual basis to their commentary.
To try and balance the narrative he has written not only ‘A Capitalist in North Korea’, but also a second book ‘A Land of Prison Camps, Starving Slaves and Nuclear Bombs?’
☆☆☆☆☆
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The average book that is currently published about the DPRK today is either a suffocating academic treatise or a harrowing tale of ever present evil, disaster and gut wrenching misery. According to most of both types of books the DPRK is inhabited by three types of people: the elitist regime, “mindless automatons” and those desperate to escape. They would have you believe that North Korea is a squalid pool of destitution and hopeless misery. The average text on North Korea today is dated, sensationalist, speculative and for good measure tosses in a large dose of doom and gloom while assuring us that the certain DPRK apocalypse is at our door.
Abt’s book, however, is none of these things. Indeed, A Capitalist in North Korea is probably the most fair-minded look at the DPRK available in print today. The book is neither a paean to Pyongyang, nor is it yet another trash for cash pseudo-novel. Equally of importance, to the average person, is the fact that Abt’s book is not an academic work either. Most academic works on North Korea plod along like an exhausted contestant in a “Tough Mudder” competition. A Capitalist in North Korea is written with good flow and pace. It is written in such a manner as to be an easy read for just about anyone who would like to learn about and acquaint themselves with North Korea as it currently is.
The writer analyzes North Korea as a businessman. He documents and discusses it’s basic problems (lack of running water, lack of electricity, petty theft), as well as, addressing thornier issues (labor camps, DPRK aggression) in a balanced manner, while also chronicling real ongoing change and development in the country, at the same time as he dispels the myths of the past. While other writers persist in describing North Korea as though it was still mired in the famine of the ‘90’s, Abt documents a country that is changing for the better with significant changes being made to improve the country’s food supply, health care system, work conditions and education. Abt can paint this picture because, unlike most other people writing about North Korea today, he has spent 7+ years living and working in North Korea, interacting with average North Koreans: miners, factory workers, janitors, sales representatives, doctors and pharmacists, as well as some of the DPRK’s elites.
A Capitalist in North Korea documents the country’s growing and improving economy. The book also covers the country’s history in brief, it’s problems, it’s propaganda, it’s monuments, etcetera, and sets them all in their cultural context. Abt also thoughtfully and thoroughly debunks many of North Korea’s most vocal critics, one by one. While so many writers want to trap North Korea in it’s past, Abt ably presents North Korea as a country moving forward, a country inhabited by thinking people, who both love and are proud of their country.
If you only ever read one book on North Korea, Felix’s Abt’s, A Capitalist in North Korea should be that book.
David Muttillo has BAs in both History and Politics & Government with an emphasis on the study of Asia from the University of Puget Sound. He earned an MA in Biblical Studies and Theology from Fuller Theological Seminary. His wife and companion of 15+ years, Kyounghee, is from Chungju in South Korea.
- Lengthy droning about how NK isn't really corrupt because its black market activities are nominally much smaller than New Zealand's black market activities. See folks, if your country is poor as hell, it cannot be corrupt, nice logical fallacy there Mr Felix.
- Human Rights Issues. Elegantly forgetting about the death camps and almost 100% lack of personal freedom while lenghtily discussing fairly good gender equality which will surely offset the other issues.
- NK really can't help being this evil and poor, because the international community and the formally still ongoing war forces it into this position. Well, that is bs. NK has been in peace for 60 years now (despite the missing peacy treaty), there is literally no reason at all to so heavily overspend on military. Perpetuated war effort and alertness serves no other purpose than to keep north koreans oppressed and motivated to endure their sad reality. That is clear to everyone except for apologists.
- Better IT experts than westerners? In a country with extreme lack of internet and hardware access? All this based on "because I saw them code algorithms in Linux". As a senior IT developer I had to laugh out loud at this part.
There is a lack of focus all over the book, jumping back an forth in time and projects. Also Felix portrays himself as the only credible source of information while berating other authors and journalists for making claims without sufficient evidence while he is doing exactly the same thing.
Indeed, most of this book looks like if it was pro-NK propaganda material. Quite sad.
And so I've done a lot of reading about North Korea, about Cuba and Russia, and about a whole lot of other people who are on the edges of the prevailing historical narrative. It doesn't mean I agree with the way they do things... But isn't it nice to find out for yourself what's right and wrong? I bring this up because, after reading a dozen or so books on this subject, Amazon said I should try this one... And so I did :-)
I'm very glad I did, too. The author is someone who takes a strictly non-political, nonpartisan view of things... He simply writes on his experiences, and on what he alone saw and experienced. I would take his account of his stay in North Korea over a thousand ridiculous news stories, especially since these stories are oftentimes reported by people who have never even been to the country.
I didn't come away with an admiration of that crazy system; however, I did come away with the understanding that, no matter the political system, people will always be people, and treating them as robots within an evil empire simply does no good (and it's simply untrue...).
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現在北朝鮮では様々な社会と経済の変更はあって、国はずっと変わっています。北朝鮮に住んでいた著者はこの国の庶民とビジネスの現実をよくわかって、この本で北朝鮮人の実際の姿を紹介しています。この本は他の北朝鮮の本と違って、スキャンダルなどを探さずに、日常生活を見せています。
私は著者とインタビューをしたことがあり、とても知識深いの方で、北朝鮮についてよくわかっている専門家です。
もし実際の北朝鮮の姿を知りたければ、この本はお勧めです!
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