North Korea runs one of the most bizarre economies on the planet. Despite being one of only a handful of nations with nuclear weapons, its 2024 gross domestic product (GDP) was a paltry $26.6 billion (€22.9 billion).
This is about 70 times smaller than South Korea’s $1.86Ā trillion economy and about a fifth of the annual revenue of the world’s top-traded company, Nvidia.
Thanks to a centrally planned economy thatĀ prioritizes domestic production, North Korea is nowhere near as reliant on trade as your average free-market economy, partly due to international sanctions, introduced by the United Nations in 2017 over its nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles program.
The North’s total imports and exports account for just a small fraction of GDP, versus the South, where international trade makes up around 80% of the economy, according to the World Bank.
How important is China in North Korea’s economy?
You could say that China playsĀ almost an exclusive role in North Korea’s minimalĀ reliance on trade.
According to the Washington-based think tank the National Committee on North Korea, Pyongyang depends on China for up to 95% of total trade and 85% of its exports.
Almost all imports also come from China. In 2024, North Korea’s legitimate imports totaled just $2.33Ā billion — tiny by global standards.
With no domestic oil production, these deliveries from ChinaĀ include petroleum and other fuels and are essential in keeping the economy functioning, along withĀ food, textiles, machinery, electronics and vehicles.
This gives Beijing enormous economic clout over North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. A recent report suggested thatĀ US President Donald Trump is now trying to leverage that muscleĀ to bring Pyongyang back to the negotiating table over its contentious nuclear weapons program.
South Korea’s Yonhap news agency reported recently that Chinese President Xi Jinping is expected to visit Pyongyang in the next few weeks, playing a key mediator role toĀ help bridge the gap between Trump and Kim in the long-running dispute. Beijing is yet to confirm the trip.
What isĀ North Korea allowed to exportĀ to the rest of the world?
The rogue state’s legitimate exports are even less impressive. According to the Korea Trade-Investment Promotion Agency, North Korea’sĀ exports barely reached $360Ā million in 2024.
Those foreign sales areĀ strikingly modest, with fake hair and wigs the country’sĀ only best seller, making up about 40% of exports, primarily to China, whichĀ then reexports them to the rest of the world.
North Korea turned to wigs for vital foreign income after sanctions blocked its traditional big exports like coal and minerals, while fake hair was not explicitly banned.
The communist country also has an abundant supply of low-cost and often forced labor — perfect for a highly labor-intensive and low-tech business like wig making.
Other goods like tungsten and other ores, frozen fish, iron and steel and watch components each make up less than 10% of the country’s exports.
Since the sanctions were imposed, Pyongyang has lostĀ roughly $2.2 billion annually in export revenue, according to theĀ Korea Economic Institute of America think tank.
How else does Pyongyang make money?
Beyond its meagerĀ exports, North Korea generates significantly more hard currency through its shadow economy.
The country sends tens of thousands of workers overseas, many to Russia and China, to work inĀ construction, logging, factoriesĀ and fisheries.
This program is widely seen by human rights groups and the UN as another form of forced labor.Ā
The state then seizes most of their wages, generating around half a billion dollarsĀ annually, according to the UN Panel of Experts.
Thousands of North Korean computer professionals also work remotely for US, South Korean and European Union-based companies, pretending to be legitimate freelancers, using false — often stolen — identities.
Often, they earn high salaries, which are then funneled back to the regime. In 2024, these loyalty remittances broughtĀ in $800 million for the state, according to the US Treasury Department.
North Korea also operates one of the world’s most sophisticated and lucrative hacking programs, prompting one US think tankĀ to label itsĀ cybercriminals “the most dangerous state-sponsored threat to the financial services sector.”
In 2025, North Korean hackers stole aĀ record $2.02 billion in cryptocurrency, representing over half of all global digital currency theft that year, the blockchain intelligence firmĀ Chainalysis calculated.
Yet, the communist nation’s biggest — and most shadowy — money spinner has beenĀ fueled by theĀ war in UkraineĀ and Pyongyang’s long-standingĀ close ties with Moscow.
North KoreaĀ has supplied Russia with millions of artillery shells, rocketsĀ and ballistic missiles, boosting the Kremlin’s war machine andĀ earning Kim’sĀ regime an estimated $7 billion to $13.8Ā billion since 2023, according toĀ South Korea’s Institute for National Security Strategy.
TheseĀ revenues, according to Seoul-based intelligence officials, areĀ being used to accelerate the North’s nuclear and ballistic missile program, as well as source additional oil and food from China.
Edited by: Rob Mudge