Traders in the North Korean border city of Hyesan are scouring Chinese markets for summer clothing and footwear samples ahead of the import season, with rising temperatures pushing preparations roughly two months earlier than in previous years.
A Daily NK source in Ryanggang province said on Tuesday that traders have recently brought in samples of women’s dresses, light blouses, summer sneakers, and dress shoes through customs checkpoints, gauging consumer interest at shops and jangmadang markets throughout the city. Jangmadang are the informal markets that have become a central feature of everyday economic life in North Korea since the famine of the 1990s.
“They’re bringing in goods from China tailored to what wealthy people, young people, and ordinary workers want,” the source said.
The sample-testing push reflects a market that has grown more selective. Domestically produced clothing and footwear in North Korea have improved in quality and design in recent years, making cheap Chinese imports less automatically competitive. Traders now say Chinese goods must offer a clear advantage in price, quality, or style to move off shelves.
“Even if something is cheap, if it doesn’t match people’s tastes, it won’t sell,” the source said. “Traders who bring in large quantities just because the price is low, or expensive luxury goods based on their own judgment, end up having to return them.”
Bold decisions and brand appeal
The wealthiest buyers present a distinct challenge. Known as donju, a term roughly meaning “money masters” that refers to North Korea’s private merchant class, affluent consumers favor branded goods and drive word-of-mouth demand that can cause orders to spike suddenly. Traders watch donju reactions closely because a single positive signal can translate into a flood of purchases.
Younger buyers follow different logic. They want stylish designs at accessible prices, and their sensitivity to trends means traders who correctly read their preferences first can secure outsize profits. “Whoever brings in the right sample can effectively monopolize that segment of the market,” the source said. “Competition to lock in goods that appeal to the donju and young people is getting fiercer.”
Chinese suppliers are moving quickly as well. A China-based source with trade connections to North Korea said merchants are traveling to product markets and garment factories across China to find goods that meet rising North Korean standards.
“In the past, I could pick items I thought looked good and send them as samples, and four out of five would get approved,” one Chinese trader said. “Now it’s hard to get even one approved. I don’t know how standards keep rising when they can’t even watch foreign television properly.”
The shift signals a broader change in how North Korean markets operate. Simple bulk sales are giving way to consumer-segmented, taste-driven commerce, and the competition among traders to anticipate what buyers want before the summer season is intensifying.
Reporting from inside North Korea
Daily NK operates networks of sources inside North Korea who document events in real-time and transmit information through secure channels. Unlike reporting based on state media, satellite imagery, or defector accounts from years past, our journalism comes directly from people currently living under the regime. We verify reports through multiple independent sources and cross-reference details before publication.
Our sources remain anonymous because contact with foreign media is treated as a capital offense in North Korea — discovery means imprisonment or execution. This network-based approach allows Daily NK to report on developments other outlets cannot access: market trends, policy implementation, public sentiment, and daily realities that never appear in official narratives.
Maintaining these secure communication channels and protecting source identities requires specialized protocols and constant vigilance. Daily NK serves as a bridge between North Koreans and the outside world, documenting what’s happening inside one of the world’s most closed societies.
May 12, 2026 at 10:50PM
by DailyNK(North Korean Media)
