The joint South-North Korean industrial complex in the North's border city of Kaesong saw its production expand 14.4 percent in 2011 from a year earlier, Seoul's unification ministry said Monday.
The total production at the Kaesong Industrial Complex reached US$369.9 million during the January-November period last year, up from $323.3 million worth of production for all of 2010, according to the Ministry of Unification.
The output during the last month of 2011 has not been tallied yet, the ministry said, adding the on-year growth rate may be far greater.
Production for the first 11 months of 2011 marks a 25.7-percent growth from the same period in the previous year, the ministry also noted.
Monthly production hit $31.1 million in January last year and hovered near the $30-million mark every month last year, except in February, according to the ministry.
The ministry attributed last year's output growth to an increasing number of workers at Kaesong.
North Korean laborers working at the complex reached a peak of 48,708 as of November last year, the ministry said. The comparable figure at the end of 2010 was 46,284, it said.
The sprawling complex, a key outcome of the inter-Korean summit in 2000, marries South Korean capital and technology with cheap labor from the North. It is now home to more than 120 South Korean small and medium-sized companies. (Yonhap News)