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PRESS RELEASE May 29, 2019

World Bank Points to Key Ways to Enhance Mongolia’s Agricultural Value Chains and Make Exports More Diverse and Competitive

Ulaanbaatar, May 29, 2019 – Mongolia’s Central Economic Corridor (CEC), the key transportation network connecting China and Russia through Ulaanbaatar, offers promising opportunities to bring Mongolian agricultural products to world markets and to diversify the country’s exports away from mining resources. Still, according to a new World Bank report, the CEC remains underutilized and underdeveloped.

The report, Mongolia Central Economic Corridor Assessment: A Value Chain Analysis of Wool-Cashmere, Meat and Leather Industries, aims to analyze the performance gap of the CEC through an examination of three key agricultural sectors. The report diagnoses the challenges these industries face, identifies opportunities for them to grow leveraging CEC’s potential, and shares policy recommendations to seize these opportunities.           

“Leveraging the potential of the Central Economic Corridor is vital to enhancing Mongolia’s trade competitiveness and diversifying its exports,” said Martin Raiser, World Bank Country Director for China, Korea and Mongolia. “We hope that this report will offer insights to Mongolia’s authorities on how to enhance the efficiency of the CEC and strengthen agricultural supply-chains.”

Over the past decade, exports tilted in favor of mining and commodities in Mongolia. Meanwhile, despite their comparative advantage, the share of Mongolia’s agribusiness products in the world market remained small. The report’s analysis shows that the country’s comparative advantage has been significantly diluted by weaknesses associated with its economic corridors, particularly the CEC.

“The CEC is underutilized and underdeveloped, increasing transport costs and restricting the range and volume of products that can profitably access export markets,” said Marcin Piatkowski, World Bank Senior Economist and lead co-author of the report. “The day the CEC can carry more exports, its economic benefits will grow and with them the quality of the exports themselves, thus breaking a vicious circle that currently thwarts Mongolia’s development.”

To tackle the pressing challenges, the report identifies a set of general policy reforms that could improve the functioning of the CEC. Short term recommendations include the need to streamline and coordinate the procedures of all border agencies, promote trade negotiations to ease access to foreign markets, set up new agricultural clusters around Ulaanbaatar and implement existing agreements with Russia and China on trade, custom inspection and food security. Medium-term policy solutions focus on the need to increase rail capacity along the CEC, ensure full compliance with international standards, and fully implement the Trade Facilitation Agreement of the World Trade Organization.

For the selected three industries, wool/cashmere, meat and leather, the report’s main short-term policy recommendations include:

  • Improve the collection, consolidation and preliminary processing of inputs.
  • Increase the exchange of information between producers and their suppliers.
  • Increase the producers’ involvement in logistics and quality control activities in their supply chains.

Medium-term recommendations emphasize the need to:

  • Facilitate the creation of cooperatives among herders.
  • Ensure mutual recognition of veterinary inspections at the border by neighboring countries.
  • Encourage industry players to propose production standards with respect to environmental pollution and waste elimination.

This report will help inform the ongoing and the future cooperation of the World Bank with Mongolia, including a US$ 20 million Mongolia Export Development Project.

 

Website: www.worldbank.org/mn

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PRESS RELEASE NO: 05/29/2019

Contacts

Ulaanbaatar
Indra Baatarkhuu
976-70078207
ibaatarkhuu@worldbank.org
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