How China Views North Korea's Readiness to Reform and Its Influence on China's North Korea Policy in the Post-Cold War Era

Main author: Kong, Tat Yan
Format: Journal Article           
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id eprints-31413
recordtype eprints
institution SOAS, University of London
collection SOAS Research Online
language English
language_search English
description China’s policy of restraint (avoidance of crippling economic sanctions) towards North Korean provocation is typically explained in terms of geopolitical concern with North Korean regime stability. The strategic and diplomatic costs of restraint would suggest the presence of non-geopolitical influences behind China’s approach. Ideational explanations emphasise the persistence of shared socialist identity as well as the traditional Sino-centric worldview as shaping influences. There is much less detailed analysis of how China views North Korea’s political economic evolution and how this view has changed over time to produce fluctuations in the bilateral relationship. In order to capture China’s motivations more fully, I introduce two additional variables, namely China’s view of the state of its own reform path (which provides the domestic context shaping policy towards North Korea), and the extent of North Korea’s readiness to prioritise economic reform. I will then use these variables to explain two contrasting phases which represented the worst (1992–1999) and best (2009–2012) of times in the bilateral relationship in the post-Cold War era. These variables also help us to understand the potentials and limitations of the upturn in bilateral relations which has occurred since 2018.
format Journal Article
author Kong, Tat Yan
author_facet Kong, Tat Yan
authorStr Kong, Tat Yan
author_letter Kong, Tat Yan
title How China Views North Korea's Readiness to Reform and Its Influence on China's North Korea Policy in the Post-Cold War Era
publisher Taylor and Francis
publishDate 2021
url https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/31413/