this post was submitted on 14 Feb 2025
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Women can’t legally drive in North Korea, but they can earn a lot by converting their private vehicles to taxis.

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[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago

This piece on North Korea's taxi economy reveals a twisted microcosm of late-stage juche capitalism. Wealthy women bankroll fleets while state-approved male drivers scramble for crumbs—$1 daily wages that eclipse "official" salaries. The regime's allergic to female drivers licenses creates perverse incentives: matriarchs silently bankroll shadow enterprises, outsourcing labor to men trapped in gig-economy serfdom.

Daily hire rotations expose the fragility—no loyalty, just transactional survival. Owners dodge accountability by cycling through disposable labor. Meanwhile, the state skims 30% off struggling citizens' hustle, propping up dead industries through parasitic taxation.

Licensing? A Kafkaesque ladder where military/factory ties determine mobility. Class-4 permits as golden tickets in a dystopian lottery. Yet even "privileged" drivers face volatility—wages swing with black-market exchange rates, turning basic income into speculative gambling.

Beneath the surface: a failing command economy forcing innovation from below. Women repurpose market haggling profits into quasi-legal ventures. Men trade dignity for won notes that might buy rice tomorrow. The entire system's held together by desperation and the regime's willingness to ignore its own collapse—so long as the cut keeps flowing.