Not really news or anything, but I've been reading Nothing to Envy: Ordinary Lives in North Korea by Barbara Demick. It's basically about what life is like in North Korea, as told by people who have fled the country. It's been pretty interesting, but the most interesting thing I've read so far is how free markets basically opened up all on their own once it became apparent that the government could no longer provide food to the population. Most men were stuck doing government jobs they weren't getting paid for, so the women of country basically run the economy by making and selling stuff on the market in order to buy the meager amount of food they can get because it was the ONLY way they could survive. Ironically, once the government started paying the men again, the price of food had gone up so much because of the markets that no one could afford it working a government job ANYWAY. You'd be lucky to afford 2-3 days of food with an entire month's salary.
It literally became such a big deal that the government had to okay these markets because to not do so would have triggered revolution.
I just thought it was interesting that the free markets are what enabled some people to survive the famine, but that those same markets have basically condemned many more to death because they can't afford the prices. North Korea has gone through a sped up economic timeline compared to our own and it's basically shown that the end game of both communism and capitalism is the same: a few rich people on top, no middle class, a multitude of poor working from dawn to dusk just to live and everyone else dead from hunger.
I'd highly recommend this book if you've ever wanted first hand accounts of life in North Korea. It's pretty awesome.