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Viewing cable 10ULAANBAATAR27, 2010 Mongolia Investment Climate Statement, Part 1 of 3
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| Reference ID | Created | Released | Classification | Origin | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10ULAANBAATAR27 | 2010-01-27 07:58 | 2011-08-30 01:44 | UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY | Embassy Ulaanbaatar | 
VZCZCXRO8923
RR RUEHCN RUEHGH
DE RUEHUM #0027/01 0270758
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 270758Z JAN 10
FM AMEMBASSY ULAANBAATAR
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 3333
RUEHOO/CHINA POSTS COLLECTIVE
RUEHUL/AMEMBASSY SEOUL 4006
RUEHKO/AMEMBASSY TOKYO 3641
RUEHMO/AMEMBASSY MOSCOW 2810
RUEHVK/AMCONSUL VLADIVOSTOK 0480
RUEHOT/AMEMBASSY OTTAWA 0136
RUEHBY/AMEMBASSY CANBERRA 0491
RUEHTA/AMEMBASSY ASTANA 0247
RHEHAAA/NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL WASHINGTON DC
RUEHLMC/MILLENNIUM CHALLENGE CORP WASHINGTON DC
RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHINGTON DC
RUCPDOC/DEPT OF COMMERCE WASHINGTON DC
RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHINGTON DC
RUCPCIM/CIMS NTDB WASHINGTON DC
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 15 ULAANBAATAR 000027 
 
SENSITIVE 
SIPDIS 
 
STATE PASS USTR, USTDA, OPIC, AND EXIMBANK 
STATE FOR EAP/CM AND EEB/CBA 
USAID FOR ANE FOR D. WINSTON 
USDOC FOR ZHEN-GONG CROSS 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: EINV ECON OPIC KTTB USTR MG
SUBJECT: 2010 Mongolia Investment Climate Statement, Part 1 of 3 
 
REF: 09 STATE 124006 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000027  001.2 OF 015 
 
 
¶1. As requested ref, post provides the 2010 Mongolia Investment 
Climate Statement. This cable, Part 1, contains sections A.1 through 
A.3. See septels for sections A.5-A.16. 
 
A.1 OPENNESS OF GOVERNMENT TO FOREIGN INVESTMENT 
 
In its specific policies, laws, and general attitude, the Government 
of Mongolia (GOM), has tended to support foreign direct investment 
(FDI) in all sectors and businesses.  However, some 2009 regulatory 
and legislative acts in the areas of environmental law, taxation, 
and mineral rights effectively narrow Mongolia's openness to FDI. 
While most Mongolian industrial and economic strategies do not 
discriminate actively or passively for or against foreign investors, 
specific governmental acts regarding foreign involvement in 
Mongolia's nascent uranium sector have spurred public criticism that 
the government is curtailing the rights of foreign investors in 
favor of the Mongolian state.  These criticisms also concern that 
changes to the uranium law have created a precedent for further 
restrictions on FDI. 
 
In general, Mongolian law does not discriminate against foreign 
investors.  Foreigners may invest with as little as USD100,000 cash 
or the equivalent value of capital material (office stock, 
structures, autos, etc.).   In both law and practice, foreigners may 
own 100 percent of any registered business with absolutely no legal, 
regulatory, or administrative requirement to take on any Mongolian 
entity as a joint venture partner, shareholder, or agent.  Mongolia 
pre-screens neither investments nor investors, except in terms of 
the legality of the proposed activity under Mongolian law.  The only 
exceptions to this flexible investment regime are in land ownership, 
petroleum extraction, and strategic mineral deposits. 
 
Limitations on Participation in Real Estate, Petroleum Extraction, 
and Strategic Minerals Deposits 
 
Only individual Mongolian citizens can own real estate.  Ownership 
rights are currently limited to urban areas in the capital city of 
Ulaanbaatar, the provincial capitals, and the county seats, or 
soums.  No corporate entity of any type, foreign or domestic, may 
own real estate.   However, foreigners and Mongolian and foreign 
firms may own structures outright and can lease property for terms 
ranging from three (3) to ninety (90) years. 
 
Mongolian law also requires oil extraction firms to enter into 
production sharing contracts with the government as a precondition 
for both petroleum exploration and extraction. 
 
Passed in 2006, Mongolia's current Minerals Law enacted the concept 
of the strategically important deposit, which empowers the GOM the 
right to obtain up to either a 34 percent of 50 percent share of any 
mine on or abutting such a deposit. The prior 1997 law had no 
concept of "strategic deposits" allowing the state to take equity in 
mines. 
 
The current law defines "a mineral deposit of strategic importance" 
as "a mineral concentration where it is possible to maintain 
production that has a potential impact on national security, 
economic and social development of the country at national and 
regional levels or deposits which are producing or have potential of 
producing above 5 percent of total GDP per year."  Ultimately, the 
power to determine what is or is not a strategic deposit is vested 
in the State Great Hural or Parliament.  To date, the GOM has only 
identified world class copper and coal reserves and all deposits of 
rare earths and uranium as reaching this threshold. 
 
If a mineral deposit is determined to be strategic and if the state 
has contributed to the exploration of the deposit at some point, the 
GOM may claim up to 50 percent. If the deposits were developed with 
private funds and the state has not contributed to the exploration 
of the deposit at any time, the GOM may acquire up to 34 percent of 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000027  002.2 OF 015 
 
 
that deposit. 
 
State participation (or share) is determined by an agreement on 
exploitation of the deposit considering the amount of investment 
made the state; or, in the case of a privately-explored strategic 
deposit, by agreement between the state and the firm on the amount 
invested by the state.    Parliament may determine the state share 
using a proposal made by the government or on its own initiative 
using official figures on minerals reserves in the integrated state 
registry. 
 
Importantly, the state equity provision is not expropriatory on its 
face, because the GOM has committed itself to compensating firms for 
the share it takes at fair market value.  Although experience is 
limited with the law, so far the GOM has honored this commitment, as 
experience with the recently signed agreement for the mega Oyu 
Tolgoi copper-gold mine project confirms. 
 
In addition, the current Minerals Law restricts the access of 
petroleum and mineral licenses to entities registered in Mongolia 
under the terms of the relevant company and investment laws.  A 
foreign entity, in its own right, cannot hold any sort of mining or 
petroleum license.    Should a foreign entity acquire a given 
license as either collateral or for the purpose of actual 
exploration or mining, and fail to create the appropriate Mongolian 
corporate entity to hold a given license, that failure may serve as 
grounds for invalidating the license.  In essence, the foreign 
entity may lose its security or its mining rights.  We advise 
investors with specific questions regarding the current status of 
their respective licenses to seek professional advice on the status 
of those licenses. 
 
Reaching Agreement on the Oyu Tolgoi Project 
 
In October 2009, the GOM, Ivanhoe Mines of Canada, and Rio Tinto 
jointly negotiated an investment and development agreement for the 
Oyu Tolgoi (OT) copper- gold deposit located in Mongolia's South 
Gobi desert.  The OT agreement vests the government of Mongolia with 
34 percent ownership of the project and provides guarantees for 
local employment and procurement. With estimated development costs 
in excess of USD seven (7) billion, this 40-year plus mine is 
conservatively expected to double Mongolia's annual GDP when it 
becomes fully operational around 2020. 
 
Observers of Mongolia's investment climate consider passage of this 
agreement an unambiguously positive sign for foreign investors. 
Although the deal took about six years to craft and several 
conditions must still be met before implementation begins, nearly 
all observers conclude that it shows Mongolia can say "Yes" to key 
projects undertaken with foreign involvement and investment.   In 
addition, the agreement confirms the GOM's commitment to 
compensating private rights holders of most deposits considered 
strategic under the current minerals.  Finally, the OT deal shows 
that the GOM and Parliament are willing to amend laws and 
regulations to enhance the commercial viability of mining projects 
in Mongolia. As other projects of varying scales have been waiting 
for OT to pass, the positive impact and message of the OT deal for 
investors should not be underestimated. 
 
2009 Laws Negatively Affecting Investor Rights 
 
Although the OT deal was the big positive story for foreign 
investors in 2009, the impact has been moderated by the passage of 
two key laws that many foreign and domestic investors think detract 
from Mongolia's claims to being a competitive, safe, and predictable 
destination for investment. 
 
The 2009 Uranium Law of Mongolia 
 
In 2009 the Parliament imposed significant new controls on mining 
and processing uranium in Mongolia.  The law creates a new 
regulatory agency, the Nuclear Regulatory Authority of Mongolia 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000027  003.2 OF 015 
 
 
(NRA), and a state-owned holding company, MonAtom, to hold assets 
that the government will acquire from current rights holders.   The 
law imposes several conditions: 
 
--Immediately revokes all current uranium exploration and mining 
licenses and then requires all holders to register these licenses 
with the NRA, for a fee. 
 
--Requires investors to accept that the Mongolian state has an 
absolute right to take -- without compensation -- at least 51 
percent of the company that will develop the mine -- as opposed to 
just the deposit -- as a condition of being allowed to develop any 
uranium property. 
 
--Creates a uranium-specific licensing, regulatory regime 
independent of the existing regulatory and legal framework for 
developing mineral and metal resources.  Prior to the Uranium Law, 
exploration licenses gave their respective holders the rights to 
discover and develop any and all mineral and metal resources 
discovered within that license area (this did not include petroleum 
resources, which are governed separately).   According to GOM 
officials, this new law means that the state can issue a distinct 
license for uranium exploration on a property otherwise dedicated to 
other mineral and metals exploration. 
 
The Law on the Prohibition of Minerals Exploration in Water Basins 
and Forested Areas of 2009 
 
In 2009, the Parliament passed a law prohibiting mining in water 
basins and forested areas of Mongolia.  The stated intent was to 
limit environmental damage caused primarily by placer gold mining in 
and around forests and watersheds.  The law imposes the following 
restrictions on exploration and mining rights: 
 
--Revokes or modifies licenses to explore for or mine any and all 
mineral resources within an area no less than 200 meters from a 
water or forest resource. 
 
--Requires the government to compensate rights holders for 
exploration expenses already incurred or revenue lost from actual 
mining operations. 
 
--Empowers local officials to determine the actual areas which can 
be mined.  In effect, the local official can extend the 200 meter 
minimum at his discretion. 
 
Both foreign and domestic investors have unambiguously criticized 
these new laws and their respective implementations as both 
non-transparent and potentially expropriatory.  They argue that 
these laws radically change the rules for investing in Mongolia's 
vital minerals sector quite late in the game, raising the question 
of Mongolia's reliability as an investment destination. 
 
Further, observers note that these laws also raise the specter of 
outright expropriation, which heretofore has not been present in 
Mongolia.  Although the Water Law requires compensation, the 
government of Mongolia has not devised detailed plans for 
indemnifying rights holders.  In regards to the Uranium law, the 
legislation explicitly rejects any obligation to compensate 
investors for loss of economic rights and property; hence, 
generating credible investor fears of government of expropriation. 
 
 
Investors note that both laws passed without sufficient public 
review and comment; and that the subsequent regulatory drafting 
process occurred with little participation of the affected parties. 
The resulting regulatory regimes do not generally specify how and on 
what basis licenses will be revoked, nor do these new process detail 
how investors might appeal non-renewals.  The open-ended powers 
seemingly granted Mongolian officials seem to give central, 
regional, and local officials broad discretionary powers to curtail 
rights without apparent limit. 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000027  004.2 OF 015 
 
 
 
Pending Elimination of the Windfall Profits Tax on Copper and Gold 
 
Since passage in 2006, the Windfall Profits Tax Law has drawn 
criticism regarding the GOM's commitment to creating an open, 
predictable, and fair environment for foreign direct investment. 
The speedy legislative process for passing the WPT was 
unprecedented:  The law passed in six days with no consultation on 
any of its provisions with stakeholders.  The entire process raised 
concerns among investors about the stability and transparency of 
Mongolia's legislative and regulatory environment, which three 
intervening years of legislating have done little to alleviate. 
 
The WPT imposes a 68 percent tax on the profits from gold and copper 
mining respectively.  For gold, the tax originally kicked in when 
gold price hit USD500 per ounce; however, in late 2008 Parliament 
raised the threshold to USD850.   For copper, the threshold is USD 
2,600 per ton.  Mining industry sources claim that the 68 percent 
tax rate, when combined with other Mongolian taxes, makes the 
effective tax 100 percent on all proceeds above the copper threshold 
price.  In theory, the WPT proceeds are set aside in a special fund 
for a combination of social welfare expenditures and a reserve fund, 
although that fund, too, was modified in late 2009. 
 
The recent OT Investment Agreement entailed further amendment to the 
WPT as a condition precedent to its passage.  OT's private investors 
successfully argued that they would not be able to run a 
commercially viable OT operation when faced with the WPT. 
Consequently, Parliament amended the WPT Law: The WPT will 
officially end for all copper concentrate and gold products in 2011. 
 
 
Revisions of the Mongolian Tax Code 
 
Effective since January 1, 2007, the current tax code reduces tax 
rates, flattens the tax schedule, removes discriminatory loopholes 
and exemptions, and provides for appropriate deduction opportunities 
for corporate investment. The current code allows firms to deduct 
more types of legitimate business expenditures: training, business 
travel, cafeteria expenses, etc.  The law also imposes a level 
playing field between foreign and domestic investors. Specifically, 
the current code eliminates the majority of discriminatory tax 
exemptions and holidays (most of which favored international 
investors). 
 
As with the WPT, the OT Agreement had a salutary effect on key tax 
provisions long-desired by foreign and domestic investors alike. 
Before OT, firms could only carry-forward losses for two (2) years 
after incurring the loss  While most businesses approved of this 
provision, many, especially those requiring large and long-term 
infrastructure development, note that the two year carry-forward 
limit is insufficient for projects with long development lead times, 
as is typical of most large-scale mining developments.  As a 
condition precedent of passing the OT Agreement, Parliament extended 
loss-carry forward to eight (8) years. 
 
On the down side, Mongolia's Parliament revoked an exemption 
available on value-added tax (VAT) taxes of 10 percent on equipment 
used to bring a given mine into production, except on equipment to 
be used in the production of highly processed mining products.  For 
example, if the OT project decides to smelt copper, imported 
equipment supporting production of metallic copper might qualify for 
a 10 percent reduction on VAT.  However, in a effort to promote 
value-added production in Mongolia, the GOM defines the production 
of copper concentrate -OT's likely copper product - as 
non-value-added output; and so, equipment imported to develop and 
operate this sort of operation would not qualify for the 10 percent 
VAT exemption. 
 
Most jurisdictions, recognizing that most mines have long 
development lead times before production begins, either waive or do 
not tax such imports at all.  Parliament, with no consultation with 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000027  005.2 OF 015 
 
 
investors, international advisors provided by donor organizations, 
or even of its own tax officials, chose to impose the VAT,  which 
immediately makes Mongolian mining costs 10 percent higher than they 
would otherwise be, impairing competitiveness and dramatically 
varying from global practice. 
 
Whether any mining output qualifies for this exemption seems 
completely at the discretion of the GOM, which has not set out in 
regulation or statute a process by which it will regularly 
adjudicate such VAT exemption requests. 
 
Unfinished Business (Including Customs Rates) 
 
Both the GOM and Parliament continue to intend to debate additional 
tax reform measures.  Discussed since 2007, no substantive progress 
has been made since.  Proposed measures include revisions to the law 
on customs and customs tariffs.  While the exact nature of the 
proposed changes in the customs law remains murky, the GOM states 
that changes will be consistent with Mongolia's WTO obligations and 
investment climate enhancement goals. 
 
Despite overall solid, positive changes, international financial 
institutions warn that the 2007 tax reforms by themselves are 
insufficient to improve Mongolia's business environment.  They 
report that reform efforts need to go beyond changes to the tax code 
to restructure the operations of the key agencies - the tax 
department, the customs administration and the inspections agency - 
that directly interact with private firms and individuals. 
 
Issues in the Telecom and Aviation Sectors 
 
While the Mongolian government supports FDI and domestic investment, 
both foreign and domestic report that individual agencies and 
elements of the judiciary often use their respective powers to 
hinder investments into such sectors as meat production, 
telecommunications, aviation, or pharmaceuticals.  Investors report 
similar abuses of inspections, permits, and licenses by Mongolian 
regulatory agencies. 
 
Abuses in Mongolia's telecom and information technology sector have 
raised public and business concerns. The state-owned telecom 
company, Mongol Telecom (MT) uses its regulatory and technical clout 
to forestall or attack competition.  As the monopoly supplier of 
land-based lines through which much internet traffic has 
traditionally flowed, MT charges predatory rates for access to all 
other Internet Service Providers (ISPs) at a rate 10 times the 
charges assessed to the state-owned ISP.  These per-minute charges 
add up and are hard for competitor ISPs to absorb.  In addition, 
some observers believe that the GOM, in an effort to make Mongol 
Telecom more attractive for privatization, is inclined to make MT 
the sole portal for all telecommunication into Mongolia.  The 
apparent intent here is to require licenses for both 
telecommunication services and technology, which only MT could 
satisfy.  There has been significant lobbying against this policy by 
ISPs, voice-over IP providers, cellular rights holders, 
multi-lateral organizations, and diplomatic missions as contrary to 
Mongolia's own competition law and long-term interests.  So far 
these efforts have delayed the passage of any damaging legislation. 
 
Compounding these problems are the non-transparent activities of the 
Mongolian Information, Communication Technology, and Post Agency 
(ICTPA), which is charged with providing policy guidance to the 
Communication Regulatory Commission of Mongolia (CRC).  Companies 
report that these agencies routinely act in ways that seem to have 
no basis in law or regulation and which have harmed American 
interests, not to mention those of investors from Mongolia and other 
countries.  For example, ICTPA has attempted to order internet 
service providers to charge set access prices, without recourse to 
the market.  The CRC routinely tenders licenses for frequency and 
information technology service allocation through a completely 
non-transparent process that invariably seems to favor certain 
domestic interests over other Mongolian companies and foreign 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000027  006.2 OF 015 
 
 
investors.  While agreeing that the GOM has an interest in 
allocating frequency, domestic and foreign investors question why 
either the ICTPA or CRC need to interfere in the provision of  ICT 
services, which they believe should be left to the consumers to 
decide. 
 
The state also involves itself in the domestic aviation sector. 
Mongolia has two domestic service providers, the privately owned 
Aero Mongolia and EZNIS.  Government regulation recommends maximum 
ticket prices that airlines may charge for all domestic routes, but 
the law does not strictly forbid airlines from charging fees higher 
than the state carrier (which does not currently operate 
domestically).  However, the GOM frowns on domestic airlines that 
charge more for service.  These state prices are well below 
operating costs and inhibit the private carriers from charging a 
break-even fee.  However, private carriers have decided to shake off 
GOM prohibitions and are charging rates that might yield profits and 
support safe and efficient flying arrangements. 
 
State-owned MIAT formerly ran domestic operations which were heavily 
subsidized, primarily through its foreign routes.  This 
state-subsidized competition with private carriers has inhibited 
investors from participating in the provision of private domestic 
service and consequently limited the aviation products and services 
that U.S. firms might sell into the Mongolian market.  Apart from a 
brief and no-longer operating domestic service in 2009 using 
aircraft from their international fleet, MIAT and the GOM have 
failed to upgrade the domestic air fleet, which is effectively 
non-existent.  This seems to have opened the field for private 
investment into the aviation sector. 
 
The Mongolian Judiciary and the Sanctity of Contracts 
 
We find no concerted, systematic, institutional abuse specifically 
targeted at foreign investment.  In the case of the 
judiciary-corruption aside (see A. 11 Corruption)-most problems 
arise from ignorance of commercial principles rather than antipathy 
to foreign investment.  In principle, both the law and the judiciary 
recognize the concept of sanctity of contracts.  However, the 
practical application of this concept lags, with both foreign and 
domestic investors reporting inconsistent enforcement of contracts 
by the judiciary.  This inconsistency comes from the slow transition 
from Marxist-based jurisprudence to more market oriented laws and 
judicial practices.  Recent decisions in banking and land use cases 
in which contract provisions were upheld reflect a growing 
commercial sophistication among Mongolia's judges.  As more judges 
receive commercial training and as Soviet era (1921-1990) jurists 
retire, we expect to see the gradual improvement of the entire 
judicial system. 
Concerns over Exit Visa's 
Although not strictly a judicial issue, in 2009 a trend intensified 
involving abuse of the country's requirement for exit visas by both 
Mongolian public and private entities to exert pressure on foreign 
investors to settle commercial disputes.  The required valid exit 
visas are normally issued at the port of departure (e.g. the 
international airport), but may be denied for a variety of reasons 
including civil disputes, pending criminal investigation, or for 
immigration violations.  If denied for a civil dispute, the visa may 
not be issued until either the dispute is resolved administratively 
or a court has rendered a decision.  Neither current law nor 
regulations establish a clear process or time-table for settlement 
of the issue.  Nor does the law allow authorities to distinguish a 
criminal and civil case when detaining a person.  In fact, the 
Mongolian government maintains the right to detain foreign citizens 
indefinitely without appeal until the situation has been resolved. 
 
Research into issue has revealed that investors from countries other 
than the U.S. are being affected by abuse of the exit-visa system. 
All cases have a similar profile.  A foreign investor has a 
commercial dispute with a Mongolian entity, often involving assets, 
management practices, or contract compliance.  The Mongolian 
entities respond by filing either civil or criminal charges with 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000027  007.2 OF 015 
 
 
local police or prosecutorial authority.  It is important to note 
that at this point there need be no actual arrest warrant or any 
sort of official determination that charges are warranted: Mere 
complaint by an aggrieved party is sufficient grounds to deny exit. 
We should note that Mongolian investors are not subject to similar 
detention when involved in commercial disputes.  Mongolian citizens 
do not require exit visas to depart Mongolia and can only be denied 
exit with if an actual arrest warrant has been issued. 
 
An investor in this situation is effectively detained in Mongolia 
indefinitely.  Some foreign investors have resolved the impasse by 
settling, allowing them to depart Mongolia.  If unwilling to settle, 
the foreign investor will have to undergo the full investigatory 
process, which may lead to a court action.  Investigations commonly 
take up to six months, and in one case an American citizen has been 
denied an exit visa for two years pending a criminal investigation 
into a failed business deal.  In addition, even if a dispute seems 
settled, it can be filed in the same venue again -- if the local 
police and prosecutors are willing -- or in a different venue. 
 
Privatization Policies and Resistance of Mongolian firms to Foreign 
Investment 
 
Privatization policies have favored foreign investment in some key 
industries, including banking and cashmere production.  The bidding 
processes for privatizations and other tenders have generally been 
transparent, and after some legal disputes among the winners and 
losers lasting from late 2006 through mid-2008, most participants 
have accepted the results. 
 
Although the GOM routinely announces that it plans to privatize its 
remaining assets, we have seen little real movement to privatize 
state holdings in the aviation, telecommunications, power, and 
mining sectors.  Recent moves by the GOM to acquire assets in the 
minerals sector - especially in uranium and coal -suggest to some 
that, to the contrary, the GOM has no intention to extract the state 
from ownership. 
 
That said, the GOM has recently discussed initial public offerings 
(IPO) for certain state-owned power, infrastructure, and mining 
holdings.  To date, the IPO discussion has developed at the 
conceptual level, with little focus on the details. 
 
Foreign companies and investors are subject to the same legal regime 
imposed on Mongolian domestic firms regarding incorporation and 
corporate activities.   For example, casinos are illegal under 
Mongolian law; and so, neither Mongolians nor foreigners may own or 
operate them (except in one specifically designated free trade zone, 
although no casino has been established there). 
 
Generally, Mongolian private businesses seek foreign participation 
and equity in all sectors of the economy.  That said, some Mongolian 
businesses use Mongolian institutions to stop competitors, if they 
can.  These actions represent no animus against foreign investment 
as such; rather, they reflect individual businesses desire to keep 
competitors, Mongolian or foreign, at bay. 
 
Key Investment Laws 
 
The Foreign Investment Law of Mongolia (FILM) transformed the 
anti-business environment of the Soviet era into today's generally 
investor-friendly regime.  Under the old system, everything not 
provided for in law was illegal.  Because such economic activities 
as franchising, leasing, joint venture companies were not 
specifically mentioned in earlier Mongolian statutes, they were 
technically illegal.  In 1993, the GOM enacted FILM to legalize all 
manner of foreign investment in Mongolia (amended in 2002 to allow 
for representative offices and franchises).  This law and its 
subsequent amendments define broad ranges of activity that would 
otherwise have limited validity under Mongolian law.  It also 
defines the meaning of foreign investment under the civil code 
without limiting activities that foreign investors can conduct. 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000027  008.2 OF 015 
 
 
FILM also establishes registration procedures for foreign companies. 
 Specifically, the law requires that any investment with 25 percent 
or more of FDI must register as a foreign-invested firm with the 
government.  The law creates a supervisory agency, the Foreign 
Investment and Foreign Trade Agency (FIFTA), that runs the 
registration process, liaises among businesses and the Mongolian 
government, and promotes in- and out-bound investments. 
 
In 2008, the Parliament of Mongolia amended the FILM.  The stated 
intent of the revision was to improve FIFTA's ability to track 
foreign investment and to enhance the services provided by FIFTA to 
foreign investors.  The amendments apply only to investments 
registered after the new law came into force in summer 2008.  The 
new law has raised the minimum level for new foreign investment from 
USD 1,000 to USD 100,000 and imposed a series of requirements on 
foreign investors seeking registration.  Registered foreign 
companies must now have FIFTA certify that their by-laws, 
environmental practices, their technologies, etc., comply with 
standards determined by FIFTA. 
 
FIFTA officials admit that procedures are still under development; 
and that because they lack specific expertise in most of these 
areas, they will have to consult with the relevant ministries and 
agencies as they assesses each firm's request for investment 
registration.  FIFTA has also not clearly defined what the precise 
processes it will use to evaluate investments, what the exact 
standards will be for any given investment, how it will determine 
those standards, and how an investor might seek redress if  FIFTA 
denies a registration request.  Foreign investors have expressed 
concern over what they perceive as FIFTA's broad and seemingly 
un-transparent regulatory authority; however, we have not received 
any complaint of abuse of these new powers to date. 
 
 
New Ministerial Structure Impacts Foreign Investment 
 
In late 2008, the Parliament re-organized the government structure 
by combining various ministries and agencies in an effort to 
streamline government functions.  Relevant to foreign investors, 
Parliament took trade policy and trade promotion functions that had 
been vested in the former Ministry of Industry and Trade (MIT) and 
FIFTA respectively and merged them with the Ministry of Foreign 
Affairs.  The new Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade (MFAT) has 
assumed direct control all formulation and execution of trade 
policies and promotion efforts, which includes export promotion and 
in-bound investment efforts.  FIFTA is now under MFAT's direct 
supervision.  Other units of MIT were absorbed by the now-named 
Ministry of Food, Agriculture, and Light Industry and Ministry of 
Nature, Environment, and Tourism. 
 
Ministry officials have stated that the government will concentrate 
on promoting Mongolian exports and foreign investment into Mongolia. 
 They want FIFTA to resemble counterpart agencies in South Korea, 
Japan, or the U.S.; and have told both us and businesses that they 
plan to get FIFTA out of the regulatory business.  The intent is to 
limit FIFTA's activities to supporting business in their efforts to 
work in Mongolia and to registering in-bound investment for purposes 
of investment tracking only. 
 
 
A.2 CONVERSION AND TRANSFER POLICIES 
 
The Mongolian government employs a limited regulatory regime for 
controlling foreign exchange for investment remittances and 
maintains exceptionally liberal policies for these transactions. 
Foreign and domestic businesses report no problems converting or 
transferring investment funds, profits and revenues, loan 
repayments, or lease payments into whatever currency they wish to 
wherever they wish.   There is no difficulty in obtaining foreign 
exchange, whether the investor wants Chinese Renminbi, Euros, 
English Pounds, Rubles, or U.S. Dollars. 
 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000027  009.4 OF 015 
 
 
In regards to domestic transactions, the Parliament of Mongolia in 
2009 closed a loophole that allowed local transactions to occur in 
any currency desired.  Now, all domestic transactions must be 
conducted in Mongolia's national currency, the Tugrik, excepting 
those entities allowed specific waivers as determined by the 
Mongolian central bank, the Bank of Mongolia. 
 
The Mongolian government wants funds to flow easily in and out of 
the nation, with one exception.  Foreign-held interest bearing 
dollar accounts remain subject to a 20 percent withholding tax.  The 
bank retains 20 percent of all such interest payments sent abroad, 
and remits this withholding to the Tax Authority of Mongolia. 
Otherwise, businesses report no delays in remitting investment 
returns or receiving in-bound funds.  Most transfers occur within 
1-2 business days or at most a single business week. 
 
Ease of transfer aside, foreign investors criticize Mongolia's lack 
of sophisticated mechanisms for converting currencies and parking 
money.  Letters of credit are difficult to obtain, and legal 
parallel markets do not exist in the form of government dollar 
denominated bonds or other instruments for parking funds in lieu of 
payment.  Many Mongolian financial institutions lack experience with 
these arrangements.  Moreover, Mongolian banking law currently 
provides incomplete statutory grounds and regulatory support for the 
activity to take place.  The immediate impact has been to limit 
access to certain types of foreign capital, as international 
companies resist parking cash in Mongolian banks or in local debt 
instruments. 
 
A.3 EXPROPRIATION AND COMPENSATION 
 
Mongolia respects property rights as they apply to most asset types. 
 In 2009, we detected no wide-scale changes in policies, statutes, 
or regulations related to the use and ownership of private property. 
 Foreigners face no legal bias in asset ownership (except that only 
citizens of Mongolian may own land) or how they structure ownership. 
 Foreign investors need not seek local partners or share ownership 
of most assets or endeavors as a condition of doing business. 
However, in foreign-investor dependent crucial mining sector, 2009 
saw the government of Mongolia (GOM) cross from actions that might 
represent "creeping expropriation" to what many consider explicitly 
expropriatory acts sanctioned through force of law, especially in 
the uranium mining sector. 
 
Security of Ownership 
 
Mongolia and the United States signed and ratified a Bilateral 
Investment Treaty (BIT) which entered in force in 1997, and which 
specifically enjoins both signatories from expropriatory acts 
against private property and investments. In addition, both 
Mongolian law and the national constitution recognize private 
property and use rights and specifically bar the government from 
expropriation of such assets. To date, the government of Mongolia 
(GOM) has not expropriated any American property or assets.  Thus, 
we have no precedent from which to assess how the Mongolian system 
would respond to seizure and compensation. 
 
Like most governments, the Mongolian government can claim land or 
restrict use rights in the national interest.  Currently, this means 
little, as most land outside Mongolia's few urban centers remains 
government property, as provided in Mongolia's constitution.  The 
government has no plans to privatize these vast countryside 
holdings, but it leases parcels for such economic activities as 
mining, pasturage, timbering, etc.  This practice remains in flux 
because the government must still determine how to let these rights 
and what fees to charge.  Except for mining, most foreign firms 
remain inactive in these sectors. 
 
Since May 2003, land in the urban areas has been privatized to 
citizens of Mongolia or leased to both citizens and foreigners for 
periods ranging from 3-90 years.  The legislation and implementing 
regulations are evolving, but so far investors believe that the GOM 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000027  010.2 OF 015 
 
 
generally respects recently enacted property rights and leases. 
 
I: Implications of the Current Minerals Laws 
 
Minerals Law of 2006 
 
We closely watch the key mining sector, Mongolia's major foreign 
exchange earner and chief engine for economic and commercial growth 
and development.  The current Minerals Law has several provisions 
that raise red flags for investors and observers alike.  The law 
does not allow the GOM to usurp rights to explore and exploit 
natural mineral, metal, and hydrocarbons resources per se.  Instead, 
the law imposes procedural requirements and grants powers to 
central, provincial, and local officials - powers that, if abused, 
might prevent mineral license holders from exercising their 
exploration or mining rights. The current law has the potential to 
deny the rights holder access to his rights without formally 
revoking use rights. 
 
An example is the new tender process for apportioning some 
exploration rights.  The old law awarded exploration rights on a 
"first come, first served" basis, a process that gave little 
discretion to government officials to intervene.  The new law lays 
out a different procedure for obtaining exploration rights on land 
explored with state funds or lands where the current holder has 
forfeited exploration rights.  The Mineral Resources Authority of 
Mongolia (MRAM) will tender such exploration rights only to firms 
technically qualified to conduct minerals work. The new tender 
procedure neither requires nor allows for a cash-bid.  Only the 
technical merits of exploration proposals will determine who gains 
exploration rights.  MRAM staff has the authority and responsibility 
to assess the merits of proposals to determine who wins the 
tenders. 
 
Both MRAM and its supervising authority, the Ministry of Mineral 
Resources and Energy, now have broad discretionary authority to 
select who will get tenements.  Under the current system, it is 
possible for a company to prospect virgin territory, and scope out a 
potential exploration site, only to risk losing the site should MRAM 
decide to grant the rights to another exploration company.  This 
authority disturbs miners, who fear this power will be the source of 
corruption and arbitrary decisions by MRAM.  Evidence suggests that 
local mining guilds will define an expert in Mongolian mining as a 
person who received a degree from a Mongolian institution, such as 
the National University, rather than an internationally recognized 
institution.  While this enforced employment program for Mongolian 
geologists would be an annoyance, the discretionary power MRAM now 
has generates the most concern.  If MRAM rejects a firm's experts 
and mining plan as unqualified, no recourse is spelled out under the 
new law, and the firm will in effect lose its rights. 
 
The concept of "expertise" allows another potential avenue for 
expropriation of rights by denying or preventing their use.  The law 
has the potential to limit the ability of rights holders to seek 
financing, because it forbids transfer of mining licenses and 
exploration rights to non-qualified individuals.  Consequently, a 
miner will not be able to offer his licenses as secured collateral 
to banks or to any lender lacking the professional qualifications to 
receive these rights if the miner defaulted on his debt obligations. 
  A given bank is unlikely to set up a "qualified" mining firm just 
to receive a pledged license offered as collateral. Thus, the law 
limits the investment pool that a mining firm might tap to finance 
its mine, which might prevent bringing a property into production, 
again denying licensees access to their legal economic rights. 
 
The current law removed from its predecessor the Mongol word for 
"exclusive" from the grant of exploration rights. The old article 
read, "To conduct exclusive exploration for minerals within the 
boundaries of an exploration area in accordance with this law." The 
new article reads, "To conduct exploration for minerals. . . ." It 
is unclear what, if anything, this deletion means.  However, the 
deletion would seem to allow the government to apportion mineral 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000027  011.2 OF 015 
 
 
rights per metal or mineral rather than as a whole, which has been 
the standard practice.  The deletion was apparently done 
intentionally, as the word appeared in earlier drafts, right up to 
the passage of the law. 
 
Investors and observers are also concerned about new authority 
granted to the MRAM Chairman to approve transfers of existing and 
new licenses.  The law grants final approval authority to the MRAM, 
without specifying any check or balance on this official's 
authority.   This power is not a revocation but if abused would 
certainly prevent exercise of economic rights. 
 
Complicating matters is that in 2008 MRAM had been moved under the 
direct authority of the Ministry of Mineral Resources and Energy in 
a sweeping re-organization of the government.  Prior to this 
restructuring, MRAM had been a quasi-independent agency, the acts of 
which did not require ministerial approval.  In the new structure, 
the ministry can intervene in the registration and transfer of 
exploration and mining licenses.  The ministry seems to have only 
intervened in cases where the license involves a "strategic" 
deposit. (See A.1 Openness to Foreign Investment for explanation of 
strategic deposits.)  In this specific category, ministerial 
officials have ordered MRAM to freeze all transfers and transactions 
involving properties near or in strategic deposits, which includes 
uranium deposits of any size and massive coal and copper deposits 
near the Chinese border.  Further, these same officials have 
indicated that the government may then revoke the rights of those 
holding exploration rights or mining licenses in or near strategic 
deposits.  Although the law seems to allow for compensation, the 
ministry has not presented formal compensation packages or even 
issued compensation guidelines to those potentially affected by its 
actions. 
 
Expropriatory Aspects of the 2009 Law on Uranium Mining 
 
In 2009 the Parliament passed a new law imposing significant new 
controls on mining and processing uranium in Mongolia.  The law 
created a new regulatory agency, the Nuclear Regulatory Authority of 
Mongolia (NRA), and a state-owned holding company, MonAtom, to hold 
assets that the government will acquire from current rights holders. 
  The law imposes several key policies: 
--Immediately revokes all current uranium exploration and mining 
licenses and then requires all holders to register these licenses 
with the NRA, for a fee. 
 
--Requires investors to accept that the Mongolian state has an 
absolute right to take -- without compensation -- at least 51 
percent of the company (as opposed to the deposit) that will develop 
the mine as a condition of being allowed to develop any uranium 
property. 
 
--Creates a uranium-specific licensing, regulatory regime 
independent of the existing regulatory and legal framework existing 
for mineral and metal resources.  Prior to the Uranium Law, 
exploration licenses gave their respective holders the rights to 
discover and develop any and all mineral and metal resources 
discovered within that license area (this did not include petroleum 
resources, which are governed separately).   According to GOM 
officials, this new law means that the state can issue a distinct 
license for uranium exploration on a property otherwise dedicated to 
other mineral and metals exploration. 
 
To many foreign and domestic investors, this law is outright, 
statutorily sanctioned expropriation, which heretofore had not been 
present in Mongolia.  Although the Minerals Law of Mongolia and 
other pieces of legislation officially state that the GOM must 
compensate rights holders for any taking, the Uranium Law gives the 
GOM the unfettered right to take uranium holdings from whomever it 
will with no obligation to compensate the rights holders. 
Complicating the issue is that the law seems to conflate the deposit 
and company mining the deposit, allowing the GOM to claim an 
uncompensated share in any entity that might mine the deposit.  In 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000027  012.2 OF 015 
 
 
effect, the GOM is demanding a free-carried, non-compensated 
interest of no less than 51 percent of any uranium mine. 
 
Acts of Provincial Administrations: 
 
With regard to the issuance of both exploration permits and mining 
licenses, provincial officials reportedly routinely use their 
authority arbitrarily to block access to mining rights legally 
granted under the current law.  For example, reports regularly 
circulate that some provincial government officials use their 
authority to designate land as "special use zones" to usurp mining 
exploration tenements.  In a common technique, provincial governors 
often reclassify property that has never felt the touch of the plow 
or felt the tread of a tourist for agricultural use or cultural 
tourism respectively, although the central government has legally 
granted exploration rights to miners.  In one case, a miner could 
not gain access to the subsurface resources because the provincial 
government claimed that doing so would damage a potato farm that had 
suddenly appeared over the site. 
 
Other miners harshly criticize the misuse of the local officials' 
rights to comment on permits for water use and mining licenses. 
Comments are advisory, and have limited legal force regarding 
disallowing activity, but the central government routinely hesitates 
to reject a governor's negative comment no matter the motives behind 
it.  The effect has been to stop progress for months, limiting 
access to the resource and costing rights holders' time and money. 
Whatever the motives, these provincial actions are often seen as a 
creeping bureaucratic expropriation through denial of access and use 
rights.  The current Minerals Law provides no clear limit on 
provincial control of permits and special use rights or guidance on 
how to apply these powers beyond codifying that the provincial and 
local authorities have some authority over activities occurring in 
their provinces and soums (counties). 
 
Faced with these unclear boundaries of authority, the central 
government often interprets the rules and regulations differently 
from the provincial authorities, creating administrative conflicts 
among the various stakeholders.  The central government acknowledges 
the problematic ambiguity but has yet to definitively clarify the 
situation in law or practice, even though the situation threatens 
accessing one's rights.  Mongolian and foreign permit holders have 
advised the government that letting this problem fester raises 
perceptions among investors that they may risk losing their economic 
rights, which can scare away inbound investors. 
 
Expansion of License Revocation Powers to the Soum Level 
 
The recently passed Law on the Prohibition of Minerals Exploration 
in Water Basins and Forested Areas of 2009 represents a considerable 
extension of unregulated authority to Mongolia's 320 soum (county) 
administrations in regards to mining activities within their 
respective jurisdictions. 
 
In 2009, the Parliament prohibited mining in water basins and 
forested areas of Mongolia.  The stated and laudatory intent was to 
limit environmental damage caused primarily by placer gold mining in 
and around forests and watersheds.  The law imposes the following 
restrictions on exploration and mining rights: 
 
--Requires the government of Mongolia to revoke or modify licenses 
to explore for any and all mineral resources within an area no less 
than 200 meters from a water or forest resource. 
 
--Requires the government to compensate rights holders for 
exploration expenses already incurred or revenue lost from actual 
mining operations. 
 
--Empowers local officials, the soum or county governors, to 
determine the actual areas which can be mined.  In effect, the local 
official can extend the 200 meter minimum at his discretion. 
 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000027  013.2 OF 015 
 
 
Current rights holders are concerned that the power of local 
governors to curtail mining in their respective jurisdictions seems 
unlimited and unregulated.  Although the governor cannot allow 
mining within the 200 meter limit, the law sets no upper limit on 
mining near water courses and forests in the respective soum. The 
local administration has full discretion to prohibit operations 400 
meters, 600, 1000, or more.  Mining companies have to work out the 
issue with the local governor; and should any company disagree with 
a given soum administration's ruling, the law makes no provision for 
administrative appeal.  A company would then have to pursue redress 
through a lengthy case in Mongolia's courts.  In either case, the 
rights holder would lose access to their economic rights for a 
protracted period or permanently. 
 
A.4 DISPUTE SETTLEMENT 
 
The GOM consistently supports transparent, equitable dispute 
settlements, but executing good intentions has proven problematic. 
These problems largely stem from a lack of experience with standard 
commercial practices rather than from any systemic intent by public 
or private entities to target foreign investors.  The framework of 
laws and procedures is functional, but many judges remain ignorant 
of commercial principles. 
 
Problems with Dispute Settlement in Mongolia's Courts 
 
Court structure is straightforward and supports dispute settlement. 
Disputants know the procedures and the venues.   Plaintiffs bring 
cases at the district court level before a single district judge or 
panel of judges, depending on the complexity and importance of the 
case.  The district court renders its verdict.  Either party can 
appeal this decision to the Ulaanbaatar City Court, which rules on 
matters of fact as well as matters of law.  It may uphold the 
verdict, send it back for reconsideration or nullify the judgment. 
Disputants may then take the case to the Mongolian Supreme Court for 
a final review.  Matters regarding the constitutionality of laws and 
regulations may be taken directly before the Constitutional Court of 
Mongolia (the "Tsetz") by Mongolian Citizens, Foreign Citizens, or 
Stateless Persons residing legally in Mongolia. 
 
Problems arise for several reasons.  First, commercial law in 
Mongolia and broad understanding of it remain in flux.  New laws and 
regulations on contracts, investment, corporate structures, leasing, 
banking, etc. have been passed or are being considered at both the 
ministerial and parliamentary levels.  Mongolian civil law does not 
work on precedents but from application of the statute as written. 
If a law is vague or does not cover a particular commercial 
activity, the judge's remit to adjudicate can be severely limited or 
non-existent.  For example, until recently leasing did not exist in 
the Mongolian civil law code as such, but seemed to be covered under 
various aspects of Mongolian civil law regarding contracts and other 
agreements.  But judgments on leasing made under these laws might 
not have applied to an arrangement not otherwise specifically 
recognized under its own exclusive law.  Further, because precedents 
are not legally relevant or binding on other judges and Mongolian 
courts, decisions reached in one case have no legal force in other 
suits, even when the circumstances are similar or even before the 
same court and judges. 
 
Trained in the former Soviet era, many judges lack training in or 
remain ignorant of commercial principles, in some cases willfully. 
They dismiss such concepts as the sanctity of the contract.  This is 
not a problem of the law, which recognizes contracts, but what most 
conclude is faulty interpretation.  In several cases courts have 
misinterpreted provisions regarding leases and loan contracts, 
allegedly intentionally in some cases.  Judges regularly ignore 
terms of a contract in their decisions.  If someone defaults on a 
loan, the courts often order assets returned without requiring the 
debtor to compensate the creditor for any loss of value.  Judges 
routinely assert that the creditor has recovered the asset, such as 
it is, and that is enough.  Bad faith and loss of value simply have 
no formal standing in judicial calculations of equity. 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000027  014.2 OF 015 
 
 
Replacing old-school judges is not an option.  It is politically 
impossible-if not functionally impractical-for the Mongolians to 
dismiss its cadre of Soviet-era judges.  There is a realistic hope 
that young justices, trained in modern commercial principles by 
international experts, will gradually improve judicial protections 
for commercial activities in Mongolia.  Lately, we have seen better 
decisions in several cases involving Americans seeking to recover on 
debts and contractual fees and to hold Mongolian government entities 
to the terms of their respective contracts and regulations, but 
these results tend to be limited to courts where modern-educated 
judges preside. 
 
Bankruptcy and Debt Collection 
 
Mongolia's bankruptcy provisions and procedures for securing the 
rights of creditors need serious reform.  Mongolian law allows for 
mortgages and other loan instruments backed with securitized 
collateral.  However, rudimentary systems for determining title and 
liens and for collecting on debts make lending on local security 
risky.  Banks frequently complain that onerous foreclosure rules are 
barely workable and unfair to creditors. 
 
Although a system exists to register immovable property-structures 
and real estate-for the purpose of confirming ownership, the current 
system does not record existing liens against immovable property. In 
addition, no system exists to register ownership of, and liens on, 
movable property.  Consequently, Mongolian lenders face the added 
risk of lending on collateral that the debtor may not actually own 
or which may have already been offered as security for another debt. 
 It is hoped that a project sponsored by the Millennium Challenge 
Corporation to create a more modern and efficient property 
registration system will help improve the ability of creditors and 
debtors to prove ownership.  For program details go to 
http://www.mca.mn. 
 
Overall, the legal system does recognize the concept of 
collateralized assets provided as security for loans, investment 
capital, or other debt-based financial mechanisms.  The legal system 
also provides for foreclosure, but this process is exceptionally 
onerous and time consuming.  A 2005 change to Mongolian law 
attempted to simplify the process by allowing creditors to foreclose 
without judicial review.  Prior to this law, all creditors had to go 
to court to collect on securitized collateral, adding months to the 
entire collection process.  However, the Constitutional Court of 
Mongolia voided the law on constitutional grounds, slowing down debt 
collection to pre-2005 levels.  Waits of up to 24 months for final 
liquidations and settlement of security were not uncommon. 
 
Once a judgment is rendered, the disputant faces a relatively 
hostile environment to execute the court's decision.  For example, a 
bank collecting on a debt in Mongolia must allow debtors to put 
forward assets for auction and set the minimum bid price for those 
assets.  If assets do not sell, a second round of auctions occurs in 
which a reduced minimum bid is put forward. The State Collection 
Office (SCO) supervises this process but does not set the price. 
However, the SCO receives 10 percent from the sales price or from 
the second auction minimum price even if there is no sale. 
 
The SCO does not allow collateralized assets to be valued by neutral 
third parties.  Because it derives income from the forced sale of 
assets, the SCO has a conflict of interest; and, anecdotally, seems 
to have failed as an impartial arbiter between debtors and 
creditors.  For banks, this has meant that forcing a company into 
bankruptcy may be the safest way to recover rather than forcing 
piecemeal sales of assets.  This approach automatically puts all 
assets into play rather than those selected by the debtor.  However, 
this procedure is onerous without a clear process behind it. 
 
Purchase financing remains tricky.  For example, a local car dealer 
financed an auto for USD 20,000 down and USD 60,000 in credit, 
complete with a local bank guarantee. The buyer subsequently 
defaulted on the loan, the bank refused to honor its guarantee, and 
 
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the dealer took the buyer to court.  Under current Mongolian law, 
interest payments are suspended for the duration of such a case, 
from first filing to final appeal before the Supreme Court of 
Mongolia.  Possibly months of interest-free time can pass while the 
asset rusts in an impound lot.  In this case, the dealer simply 
reclaimed the car and dropped the lawsuit, swallowing the lost 
interest payments and loss of value on the car.  Domestic and 
foreign businesses often respond by requiring customers to pay in 
cash, limiting sales and the expansion of the economy. 
 
Binding Arbitration: International and Domestic 
 
The Mongolian government supports and will submit to both binding 
arbitration and international settlement procedures.   However, 
glitches remain in local execution.  Mongolia ratified the 
Washington Convention and joined the International Centre for 
Settlement of Investment Disputes in 1991.  It also signed and 
ratified the New York Convention in 1994. 
 
To our knowledge, the government of Mongolia has accepted 
international arbitration in five disputes where claimants have 
asserted the government reneged on a sovereign guarantee to 
indemnify them.  In all cases the government has consistently 
declared that it would honor the arbitrators' judgments.  However, 
this resolution has not been put to the test.  In the four cases 
where a decision has been rendered, Mongolia has won each case; and 
so, its commitment to imposing a negative international arbitral 
decision remains untested. 
 
More widely, Mongolian businesses partnered with foreign investors 
accept international arbitration, as do government agencies that 
contract business with foreign investors, rather than avail 
themselves of the Arbitration Bureau operated by the Mongolian 
National Chamber of Commerce and Industry.  These entities tell us 
that they seek redress abroad because they perceive that domestic 
arbitrators are too politicized, unfamiliar with commercial 
practices, and too self-interested to render fair decisions. 
 
Although arbitration is widely accepted among business people and 
elements of the government, support for binding international 
arbitration has not penetrated local Mongolian agencies responsible 
for executing judgments.  In two cases, the Mongolian-state-owned 
copper mine lost two international arbitral cases.  The awards were 
certified and recognized as valid and enforceable by Mongolian 
courts.  But the local bailiff's office has consistently failed to 
execute the collection orders.  Local business people routinely cite 
the failure of SCO and the bailiffs to enforce court-ordered 
foreclosures and judgments as the most common problem threatening 
resolution of debt-driven disputes. 
 
ADDELTON