Today, the North Korean authorities began

to replace all 5000 KPW bills in the country with a new note. The move does not

represent a currency redenomination of the sort implemented in November 2009.

Rather, it is a currency replacement, and for the time being only one bill, the

5000 KPW, is being replaced.

The most surprising news is that Kim Il

Sung’s likeness has been deleted from the new bill.

For a number of decades, the highest

denomination bill in circulation has featured an image of Kim Il Sung, most

recently the benevolent, smiling portrait in use since his death in 1994. Now,

however, the front of the bill features an image of the house at Mankyungdae

where official propaganda says Kim was born, and the back contains an image of

the International Friendship Exhibition at Mt. Myohang.

Removing the portrait of Kim Il Sung at

this time may seem particularly obtuse. After all, Kim Jong Eun has been

deliberately mimicking Kim Il Sung since the beginning of his rule. From his

walk to his laugh, his hairstyle and even his speech, Kim has sought to follow

in his grandfather’s footsteps. This has been done to enhance the younger man’s

legitimacy and inspire nostalgia for the time before Kim Jong Il came

officially to power, when life was better for most people in the country.

However, it may be designed to indicate to

the population that Kim Jong Eun is now in a position to rule in his own right,

having seized control of the armed forces, administration and Party alike,

settling his ruling system into position. In such circumstances, the change makes more sense.

There may also be an international

dimension. By eliminating Kim Il Sung from the 5000 KPW and bringing in a less

overtly propagandist image, that of the International Friendship Exhibition, North

Korea may seek to symbolically proclaim that it is becoming a “normal” economically

developing country, the better to attract potential investment.

Indeed, a senior South Korean expert told

Daily NK on condition of anonymity, “Kim Jong Eun is looking for economic

results. He’s moved away from the Kim Il Sung-Kim Jong Il era focus on heavy

industry to concentrate on things like the apartments on Changjeon St, Munsu

Water Park, and Masikryong Ski Resort. He can’t actually go out and negate Kim

Il Sung officially, but he can change things up to really emphasize the image

of himself as leader.”

However, the simplest answer to the

question of why Kim’s image has been removed, and the one that sources inside

North Korea tend to agree with, is that a 10,000 KPW bill is going to be put

into circulation in due course, and that the new bill, when it appears, will once more feature the likeness of Kim Il Sung.

Such a step would be economically logical, since

inflation continues to eat away at the value of the Korean People’s Won. For

the time being, however, it is unclear when such a new bill will appear, if at

all. Daily NK inside sources asked banking officials about the possibility, but

were rebuffed with the answer, “Don’t ask,” an answer that only lends greater weight to the

thesis that a brand new denomination is only a matter of time.