This monograph reviews the efficacy of economic statecraft vis-
-vis North Korea, with a particular focus on the use of sanctions
and inducements on the part of the United States in seeking to
achieve nonproliferation and wider foreign policy objectives. Two
structural constraints operate: North Korea's particularly
repressive state, with a narrowing governing coalition; and the
country's changing economic relations. As an empirical matter,
there is little evidence that sanctions had effect, or did so only
in conjunction with inducements. However, inducements did not yield
significant results either, in part because of severe credibility
and sequencing problems in the negotiations.
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