The
staying power of the ‘wolf’ economy
– Mongolia’s answer to the Asian
tiger – will depend on how it uses its resources to sustainably promote equitable growth.
At the heart of this is an ambitious infrastructural reform strategy with twin
pillars: a
five-fold railway expansion and wide-scale
housing regeneration.
The railway expansion aims to be a game changer for economic
transformation and is likely to bring structural benefits too. The Oyu Tolgoi and Tavan Tolgoi mineral
deposits will be connected to its Sainshand industrial complex and will link to
Russia and China, laying the foundation for Mongolia’s long-term industrial policy.
Housing regeneration in Ulan Bator will improve the quality of lives. Ulan Bator’s Ger district is home to 60% of the urban population of 1.4 million. There is no functioning sewage, water, electricity or heating system for its residents – most of whom live in Gers, or felt huts, giving the district its name.
On paper, these plans for spending resource windfalls look eminently sensible. Yet despite a 35-fold increase in capital spending between 2003 and 2013; translating these plans into a reality has proved difficult, demonstrated by the stalled railway expansion. What explains these difficulties?
Mongolia is grappling with
a level of macroeconomic uncertainty likely to derail any
longer-term reform plans. Like other resource-rich economies, it is acutely
vulnerable to lower global commodity prices. It is also vulnerable to building global economic
risks for low income and lower middle income economies. Mongolia’s capital account liberalisation fuelled a level of capital
inflows that, in the absence, of a developed capacity to
effectively channel them, has
resulted in macroeconomic vulnerability.
A sharp drop in Mongolia’s terms-of-trade has exacerbated its ability to
finance the latter stages of its infrastructural reform. And at 25% of GDP, Mongolia’s current account deficit makes it highly dependent on global
finance to start with.
High government indebtedness has destabilised
public finances and the ability to ring-fence future mineral revenue for infrastructure. Although
the government expects significant long-term export revenues from its mineral
deposits, at around 10% its fiscal deficit will limit potential economic stimulus.
Mongolia’s systems for managing public investments are
also under strain. Pressures to cut ribbons on visible infrastructure
investments are high everywhere, but even stronger in resource-rich countries,
where resource wealth can seem like ‘manna from heaven’. A World Bank study found many small uneconomic
projects being financed, but failures
to deliver large transformative projects. The construction sector has also been unable to keep
up with demand.
So what can we learn from Mongolia’s efforts to build the ‘wolf economy’?
- Money is not enough: decisions on what to
build and how to build infrastructure matter. Unless constraints in government
and construction sector are addressed, more money may just mean more waste.
- Financing for infrastructure needs to be sustainable:
the formation and usage of stabilisation funds during economic upswings is key.
These will ensure that infrastructural reform agendas remain on track in the
longer-term.
- There are limits to
what technical solutions at the national level can achieve. Improved global
economic governance and information sharing is needed on the transmission of
financial shocks, particularly when it comes to commodity prices
Phyllis Papadavid will speaking at the 2015 CAPE conference on how governments can avoid the mistakes of past periods of infrastructure booms. Sign up to watch online.