Publication |
2011.
|
Summary/Abstract |
This paper plots the greater difficulties of future Korean unification through a
comparison with Germany 1989/90. The balance of forces favors a more politicized,
more expensive, and more internationally contested Korean unification course
than in Germany. Domestically: there are more North Koreans than there were
East Germans, and they are much poorer. There are fewer South Koreans than
there were West Germans, and they are less wealthy also. South Korea's state
strength or capacity is lower than West Germany's was, while North Korea is a
semi-failed state, even by East German standards. So, fewer people with a lower
GDP per capita in a weaker system will support more people with less wealth from
a worse system. Internationally: today's external patron (the United States) of the
free Korean half is weakening, while the external patron (China) of the communist
half is strengthening. The opposite was true of the United States and West Germany,
and the Soviet Union and East Germany, in 1989. Today's northern patron (China)
is trying to push further into the Asian continent, while yesterday's eastern patron
(the Soviet Union) was looking for an exit from central Europe. Chinese peninsular
intervention is therefore easier, while U.S. support for South Korea's unification
terms will be more difficult.
|