In 2005, in a plenary session of the
Supreme People's Assembly Pak spoke regarding the reintroduction of the public distribution system. Pak proposed an administrative solution to food distribution and labeled it the party's position: "By all means, we must reach this year's grain production targets by thoroughly implementing the party's policy of agricultural revolution by fully concentrating and mobilizing the entire country's efforts into the agricultural front". On 11 April 2007, the
Korean Central News Agency reported that during the 5th session of the 11th Supreme People's Assembly of the DPRK, Pak Pong-ju was "relieved … of premiership" and
Kim Yong-il elected the new premier. He had not been seen in public since May 2006. It is rumored that he was removed from office because he misused oil funds to be used for the farming sector, or that he was too heavily focused on economic development suggestions from the
People's Republic of China, instead of home-grown ideas. As Premier, Pak Pong-ju is the
head of government in the DPRK, and formed the top executive leadership of the DPRK with other executive officials. The other branch of the executive government was the
National Defense Commission of North Korea, led by
Chairman of the National Defence Commission Kim Jong Un. As premier, he is responsible for organizing the
cabinet and appoints ministers and vice-premiers upon confirmation by the Supreme People's Assembly. Prior to becoming Premier, Pak had served as Chemical Industry Minister. He serves as part of a committee heading the executive branch of the North Korean government, along with Kim Jong Un and SPA Presidium chairman
Kim Yong-nam. Each man nominally holds one-third of the powers held by a president in most presidential systems. Pak handles domestic affairs, Kim Yong-nam conducts foreign relations and Kim Jong Un commands the armed forces. On 23 August 2010,
The New York Times reported that Pak Pong-ju "resurfaced at a state function in the capital, Pyongyang, on Saturday, carrying the title of first deputy director of the
Central Committee of the ruling
Workers' Party of Korea, according to the North's state-run
Korean Central Television." He effectively replaced Kim Jong Il's sister
Kim Kyong-hui as director of the Party Light Industry Department in 2012 (he was its vice-director from 1992 to 1998 and 2010–2012). He was reputedly close to
Jang Sung-taek and part of the current shifting of the government's attention to the consumer economy.{{cite web|last=Mansourov|first=Alexandre|title=A Dynamically Stable Regime ==Second Premiership (2013–2019)==