Fruit and vegetables fill North Korea’s markets as prices climb
North Korean markets are stocked with more imported fruit and greenhouse-grown produce than they have been in years, but soaring prices are leaving many shoppers priced out even as the displays look more abundant than ever. According to a Daily NK source in North Hamgyong provinc
North Korean markets are stocked with more imported fruit and greenhouse-grown produce than they have been in years, but soaring prices are leaving many shoppers priced out even as the displays look more abundant than ever. According to a Daily NK source in North Hamgyong province, markets in Hoeryong and other cities have recently seen a surge of Chinese fruit alongside vegetables and greenhouse produce from local farms, making produce stalls far more varied than in past years. Pineapples, bananas and oranges now sit alongside eggplant, melon and strawberries grown in greenhouses, giving the appearance that food is more plentiful than before the COVID-19 pandemic.
But the source said many North Korean people are afraid to open their wallets given how much prices have climbed. At one Hoeryong market, pineapple currently sells for 130,000 North Korean won per kilogram, banana for 110,000 won, orange for 80,000 won and mandarin for 65,000 won. Melon and cherries fetch an even steeper 300,000 to 350,000 won.
Vegetable prices have also risen sharply. Tomatoes and eggplant sell for more than 60,000 won, while mushrooms, green onions and spinach go for 10,000 to 20,000 won. More common vegetables such as cabbage, napa cabbage, radish and cucumber sell for around 5,000 won.
DAILY NK · Market Watch Check out Daily NK’s latest data for USD-KPW rates inside North Korea here. Prices have doubled even as variety grows “Compared to before, the variety is much greater, but prices for most items have more than doubled,” the source said. “Looking at the fruit and vegetables on display, it might seem like life has improved, but in reality many people just look at the price tags and walk away.”
The source added that plenty of people still buy at these prices without hesitation, saying the gap in spending power between wealthy and poor North Korean people is now plainly visible in the markets. That contrast is fueling a sense of relative deprivation among North Korean people, some of
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