Main indicator of economy
GDP (2009 est.): 6.1 trillion Mongolian Tugruks/MNT
(U.S. $4.2 billion at current exchange rates).
GDP growth (2009): -1.6%.
Per capita GDP (2009): approx. $1,551.
Natural resources: Coal (thermal and
metallurgical), copper, molybdenum, silver, iron, phosphates,
tin, nickel, zinc, wolfram, fluorspar, gold, uranium, and
petroleum.
Agriculture (21.2% of 2009 GDP, livelihood for
about 40% of population): Products--livestock and byproducts,
hay fodder, vegetables.
Industry (30.5% of 2009 GDP, includes mining
22%, manufacturing 5.9%, and utilities (electricity, gas, and
water) 2.6%: Types--minerals (primarily copper and gold),
animal-derived products, building materials, food/beverage.
Trade: Total turnover of foreign trade for 2009
was $4.02 billion. Exports--$1.88 billion (U.S. dollar (USD)
figures based on current USD/MNT exchange rate): minerals,
livestock, animal products, and textiles. Markets--Asian
countries (approx. 75.5%), European countries (approx. 15.81%),
and countries of American continent (approx. 8.5%).
Imports--$2.13 billion: machinery and equipment, fuels, food
products, industrial consumer goods, chemicals, building
equipment, vehicles, textiles. Suppliers--91 countries account
for 93.2% of total imports, of which European countries (50.5%)
and Asian countries (42.7%).
Aid received: From 1990-2008, official
development assistance to Mongolia from bilateral and
multilateral donors totaled over $3.698 billion. Received
$185.94 million in official development assistance in 2008.
Fiscal year: Calendar year.
ECONOMY
Economic activity in Mongolia has traditionally been based on herding
and agriculture. Mongolia has extensive mineral deposits; copper, coal,
molybdenum, tin, tungsten, and gold account for a large part of
industrial production. Soviet assistance, at its height one-third of
GDP, disappeared almost overnight in 1990-91 at the time of the
dismantlement of the U.S.S.R., leading to a very deep recession.
Economic growth returned due to reform embracing free-market economics
and extensive privatization of the formerly state-run economy. Severe
winters and summer droughts in 2000-2001 and 2001-2002 resulted in
massive livestock die-off and anemic GDP growth of 1.1% in 2000 and 1%
in 2001. This was compounded by falling prices for Mongolia's
primary-sector exports and widespread opposition to privatization.
Growth improved to 4% in 2002, 5% in 2003, 10.6% in 2004, 6.2% in 2005,
and 7.5% in 2006. Because of a boom in the mining sector, Mongolia had
high growth rates in 2007 and 2008 (9.9% and 8.9%, respectively). Due to
the severe 2009-2010 winter, Mongolia lost 9.7 million animals, or 22%
of total livestock. This immediately impacted meat prices, which
increased twofold; GDP dropped 1.6% in 2009. A return to growth,
however, appears likely for 2010.
Besides agriculture (21.2% of GDP), dominant industries in the
composition of GDP are mining, trade and service, and transportation,
storage, and communication. Mongolia's economy continues to be heavily
influenced by its neighbors. For example, Mongolia purchases nearly all
of its petroleum products from Russia. China is Mongolia's chief export
partner and a main source of the "shadow," or "gray," economy. The
gray--largely cash--economy is estimated to be at least one-third the
size of the official economy, but actual size is difficult to quantify
since the money does not pass through the hands of tax authorities or
the banking sector. Remittances from Mongolians working abroad, both
legally and illegally, constitute a sizeable portion. Money laundering
is growing as an accompanying concern. Mongolia, which joined the World
Trade Organization in 1997, is the only member of that organization to
not be a participant in a regional trade organization. Mongolia seeks to
expand its participation and integration into Asian regional economic
and trade regimes.
Communist era
The rapid political changes of 1990–91 marked the beginning of
Mongolia's efforts to develop a market economy, but these efforts have
been complicated and disrupted by the dissolution and continuing
deterioration of the economy of the former Soviet Union. Prior to 1991,
80% of Mongolia's trade was with the former Soviet Union, and 15% was
with other Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (CMEA) countries.
Mongolia was heavily dependent upon the former Soviet Union for fuel,
medicine, and spare parts for its factories and power plants.
The former U.S.S.R. also served as the primary market for Mongolian
industry. In the 1980s, Mongolia's industrial sector became increasingly
important. By 1989, it accounted for an estimated 34% of material
products, compared to 18% from agriculture. However, minerals, animals,
and animal-derived products still constitute a large proportion of the
country's exports. Principal imports included machinery, petroleum,
cloth, and building materials.
In the late 1980s, the government began to improve links with
non-communist Asia and the West, and tourism in Mongolia developed. As
of January 1, 1991, Mongolia and the former Soviet Union agreed to
conduct bilateral trade in hard currency at world prices.
Despite its external trade difficulties, Mongolia has continued to press
ahead with reform. Privatization of small shops and enterprises has
largely been completed in the 1990s, and most prices have been freed.
Privatization of large state enterprises has begun. Tax reforms also
have begun, and the barter and official exchange rates were unified in
late 1991.
Transition to a market
economy
Between 1990 and 1993, Mongolia suffered triple-digit inflation, rising
unemployment, shortages of basic goods, and food rationing. During that
period, economic output contracted by one-third. As market reforms and
private enterprise took hold, economic growth began again in 1994–95.
Unfortunately, since this growth was fueled in part by over-allocation
of bank credit, especially to the remaining state-owned enterprises,
economic growth was accompanied by a severe weakening of the banking
sector. GDP grew by about 6% in 1995, thanks largely to a boom in copper
prices. Average real economic growth leveled off to about 3.5% in
1996–99 due to the Asian financial crisis, the 1998 Russian financial
crisis, and worsening commodity prices, especially copper and gold.
Mongolia's GDP growth fell from 3.2% in 1999 to 1.3% in 2000. The
decline can be attributed to the loss of 2.4 million livestock in bad
weather and natural disasters in 2000. Prospects for development outside
the traditional reliance on nomadic, livestock-based agriculture are
constrained by Mongolia's landlocked location and lack of basic
infrastructure. Mongolia's best hope for accelerated growth is to
attract more foreign investment. Since 1990, more than 1,500 foreign
companies from 61 countries have invested a total of $338.3 million in
Mongolia. By 2003 private companies made up 70% of Mongolian GDP and 80%
of exports.