Thursday, June 3, 2010

At Kaesong, owners wait for other shoe to drop

PAJU, Gyeonggi - Gang Chang-bum, 44, the head of clothing manufacturer

55 & 66 Dot Com Company at the inter-Korean Kaesong Industrial Complex, complains that he wakes up from sleep at least four to five times

a night these days.

“I invested 10 billion won [$8.2 million] in this business, including a 7

billion won loan from the bank,” said Gang, whose company has been

operating in the joint industrial complex since late last year.

“I invested boldly to start a ‘real’ business but ...”

As he drove from his home in Seoul to his factory in Kaesong, he confessed

that his business is now losing around 100 million won per month.

In the wake of escalating North-South tensions since the Navy ship

Cheonan went down on March 26, business owners at the industrial zone

say they are walking on thin ice. Their nerves were shaken further when

North Korea announced Monday that it would bar South Korean companies

from removing machinery and equipment from the industrial complex, in

their aim to keep the project alive.

The Kaesong Industrial Complex was launched after North and South

Korea reached an agreement during the inter-Korean summit held in 2000.

It is the last remaining point of economic cooperation between the two

Koreas.

Around 110 South Korean companies employ 42,000 North Korean workers

at factories in Kaesong. The project, however, has been close to a shutdown

since Seoul decided to minimize the number of South Koreans staying at

the industrial complex.

Gang said that he saw problems even before the ship sank.

“I was only able to employ around 250 North Korean workers, even though

I requested 2,570. So a portion of the company’s production was done at

Chinese plants. Amid worsening circumstances, the Cheonan situation

broke out,” said Gang, adding that he has begun to worry about quality

control since the government has minimized the number of South Korean

workers who can stay in the area.

Park Hyeon-su, 50, head of an electronic parts company at the industrial

complex, has a similar story.

“I feel as though I’m living with a time bomb,” said Park. The tensions have

made him start smoking again, two and a half years after he quit.

Park said it’s like working on a roller coaster, with every day changing with

the latest news. Even so, he said that he will wait a little longer before

doing anything.

“Considering the labor force and quality [of the products], Kaesong

Industrial Complex is about 20 percent more competitive than China.”

Manufacturers at the industrial complex gathered on Tuesday to discuss

business countermeasures to the post-Cheonan diplomacy. The Kaesong

Industrial District Management Committee will hold another meeting today

to formulate plans to request the government to create measures to protect

companies in the joint industrial complex.

http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/print.asp

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