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Viewing cable 10ULAANBAATAR29, 2010 Mongolia Investment Climate Statement, Part 3 of 3

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
10ULAANBAATAR29 2010-01-27 08:17 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Embassy Ulaanbaatar
VZCZCXRO8990
RR RUEHCN RUEHGH
DE RUEHUM #0029/01 0270817
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 270817Z JAN 10
FM AMEMBASSY ULAANBAATAR
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 3362
RUEHOO/CHINA POSTS COLLECTIVE
RUEHUL/AMEMBASSY SEOUL 4035
RUEHKO/AMEMBASSY TOKYO 3670
RUEHMO/AMEMBASSY MOSCOW 2839
RUEHVK/AMCONSUL VLADIVOSTOK 0509
RUEHOT/AMEMBASSY OTTAWA 0165
RUEHBY/AMEMBASSY CANBERRA 0520
RUEHTA/AMEMBASSY ASTANA 0276
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 11 ULAANBAATAR 000029 
 
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 3 of 3 
 
REF: 09 STATE 124006 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000029  001.2 OF 011 
 
 
1. As requested ref, post provides the 2010 Mongolia Investment 
Climate Statement. This cable, Part 3, contains sections A.10 
through A.16. See septels for sections A.1-A.9 
 
A.10 Competition from State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs) 
 
Mongolia passed and implemented a competition law applying to 
foreign, domestic, and state-owned entities active in Mongolia.  As 
a practical matter, competition between state-owned and private 
businesses had been declining for the simple reason that many 
parastatals have been privatized.  The exceptions are the 
state-owned power and telecom industries, a national airline 
(international only at present), the national rail system 
(half-owned by Russia), several coal mines, and a large copper 
mining and concentration facility (also half-owned by Russia). 
 
Although the trend had been for the GOM to extract itself from 
ownership of firms and other commercial assets, both the current 
Minerals Law of Mongolia and the 2009 Uranium Law bring the state 
back into mining. (See Chapter A.1:  Openness of Government to 
Foreign Investment for fuller discussions of both the 2009 Uranium 
Law and Minerals Law)  Under both laws, the GOM granted itself the 
right to acquire equity stakes ranging from 34% to perhaps 100% of 
certain deposits deemed strategic for the nation.  Once acquired, 
these assets are to be placed with one of two state-owned management 
companies: Erdenes MGL, for non-uranium assets; or MonAtom for 
uranium resources.  These companies are then mandated to use the 
proceeds from their respective activities for the benefit of the 
Mongolian people. 
 
In addition, the GOM has publically discussed using the expected 
proceeds from mining to underwrite SOE projects in variety of 
sectors, beyond its current mining portfolio.  These include 
operations in flour milling, meat-processing, telecommunications, 
and pharmaceuticals.  Business observers have found such plans 
unsettling; for rather than use the revenues to create 
infrastructure or to provide affordable financing, the GOM seem to 
want to enter into direct competition with both foreign and domestic 
private investors.  From statements by GOM policy representatives, 
investors might conclude the GOM is clearly considering giving its 
SOE preferential financing at rates not available to commercial 
firms. 
 
The role of state as an equity owner, in terms of management of 
revenues and operation of the mining asset, remains unclear at this 
point.   Currently, most GOM's assets are managed by professionals 
appointed by the State Property Committee (SPC), which ultimately 
answers to Parliament and the Prime Minister.  How the SPC selects 
management and boards of directors remains non-transparent, but 
observers perceive the process to be politicized, with Parliament 
playing a key role in appointments. 
There are some concerns over the capacity of the GOM to deal with 
conflicts of interest arising from its position as both regulator 
and owner of these strategic assets.  Specifically, firms are 
worried that the GOM's desire to maximize local procurement, 
employment, and revenues may comprise the long term commercial 
viability of any mining project.  In addition, discussions are 
underway to set up three new state-owned holding entities to manage 
assets in three priority areas -- mining, energy, and infrastructure 
-- then take the companies public to raise investment revenues 
through the capital markets. 
 
Mongolia currently lacks a sovereign wealth fund (SWF); however, the 
GOM has expressed an interest in using mining revenues to create 
such a fund.  The issue remains under review. 
 
A.11 Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) 
It is early days for corporate social responsibility (CSR) in 
Mongolia.  Most western companies make a good faith effort to work 
with the communities in which they invest.  These efforts usually 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000029  002.2 OF 011 
 
 
take the form of specific projects aimed at providing missing 
infrastructure-wells, power, medical and educational structures-or 
such support for education as books and scholarships.   The larger 
western firms tend to follow accepted international CSR practices 
and underwrite a full range of CSR activities across Mongolia; 
however, the smaller ones, lacking sufficient resources, limit their 
CSR actions to the locales in which they work.  Only the largest 
Mongolian firms regularly undertake CSR actions, with small to 
medium -sized enterprises generally (but not always) limiting the 
use of limited resources to underwrite CSR actions. 
Generally, firms that pursue CSR are perceived favorably, at least 
within the communities in which they act.  Nationally, responses 
range from praise from politicians to cynical condemnation by 
certain civil society groups of CSR actions as nothing more than an 
attempt to "buy" public approval. 
 
A.12 POLITICAL VIOLENCE 
 
Mongolia is peaceful and stable.  Political violence is rare. 
Mongolia has held nine (9) peaceful presidential and parliamentary 
elections in the past 16 years.  However, a brief but violent 
outbreak of civil unrest followed disputed parliamentary elections 
on July 1, 2008.  Accompanied by some property destruction and 
bodily injury, the unrest was quickly contained and order restored. 
There has been no repeat of this civil unrest since July 1. 
Mongolia held peaceful presidential elections in May 2009 in which 
the incumbent president was defeated and power smoothly transitioned 
to the current president 
 
Mongolia has an ethnically homogenous population: 97percent of the 
population is Khalkh Mongol. The largest minority, numbering an 
estimated 90,000 people, is Kazakh (Muslim), concentrated in the far 
western part of the country. 
 
There have been no known incidents of anti-American sentiment or 
politically motivated damage to American projects or installations 
in at least the last decade.  However, Mongolia has seen a gradual 
and perceptible level of rising hostility to foreign nationals in 
general and to Chinese nationals in particular. This hostility has 
led to some instances of improper seizure of Chinese-invested 
property; and in more limited cases acts of physical violence 
against the persons and property of Chinese nationals resident in 
Mongolia.  Other Asians living in Mongolia have expressed concern 
that they may inadvertently become victims of this hostility. 
 
A.13 CORRUPTION 
 
Corruption in Mongolia, including bribery, raises the costs and 
risks of doing business.  Corruption corrodes market opportunities 
in Mongolia for U.S. companies as well as the overall Mongolian 
business climate.  It also deters international investment into 
Mongolia, stifles economic growth and development, distorts prices, 
and undermines the rule of law. 
 
It is important for U.S. companies, irrespective of their size, to 
assess the business climate in Mongolia to have an effective 
compliance program or measures in place to detect and prevent 
corruption, including foreign bribery.  U.S. individuals and firms 
operating or investing in such foreign markets as Mongolia should 
take the time to become familiar with the relevant anticorruption 
laws of both Mongolia and the United States in order to comply with 
them, and where appropriate, they should seek the advice of legal 
counsel. 
 
The U.S. Government seeks to level the global playing field for U.S. 
businesses by encouraging other countries to take steps to 
criminalize their own companies' acts of corruption, including 
bribery of foreign public officials, by requiring them to uphold 
their obligations under relevant international conventions.  A U. S. 
firm that believes a competitor is seeking to use bribery of a 
foreign public official to secure a contract should bring this to 
the attention of appropriate U.S. agencies, as noted below 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000029  003.2 OF 011 
 
 
 
Current Views on Mongolian Corruption 
 
In mid-2005, the USAID Mission to Mongolia, in collaboration with 
USAID/Washington and The Asia Foundation (TAF), funded a corruption 
assessment conducted by Casals & Associates, Inc. (C&A)  The 
complete report is available at http://www.usaid.gov/mn.  Follow-up 
surveys of the problem show that the results of this assessment 
remain valid in 2010.  The study found that opportunities for 
corruption continue to increase in Mongolia at both the "petty" or 
administrative and "grand" or elite levels.  Both types of 
corruption should be of concern to Mongolians, but grand corruption 
should be considered a more serious one because it solidifies 
linkages between economic and political power that could negatively 
impact or ultimately derail or delay democracy and development. 
Several inter-related factors contribute to Mongolia's corruption 
problem: 
 
--A blurring of the lines between the public and private sector 
brought about by systemic conflicts of interest at nearly all 
levels; 
 
--A lack of transparency and access to information, stemming in part 
from a broad State Secrets Law that surrounds many government 
functions and has yielded criticism that it renders the media 
ineffective and hinders citizen participation in policy discussions 
and government oversight; 
 
--An inadequate civil service system that gives rise to a highly 
politicized public administration and the existence of a "spoils 
system;" 
 
--Limited political will to actually implement required reforms in 
accordance with the law, complicated by conflicting and overlapping 
laws that further inhibit effective policy implementation; 
 
--Weak government control institutions, including the Central Bank, 
National Audit Office, parliamentary standing committees, Prosecutor 
General, Generalized State Inspection Agency, State Property 
Committee, and departments within the Ministry of Finance. 
 
The aforementioned systemic shortcomings have allowed for an 
evolution of corruption in Mongolia that "follows the money," 
meaning that graft on the most significant scales generally occurs 
most often in the industries and sectors where there is the most 
potential for financial gain.  During the early 1990s, in the early 
transition toward democracy and market economy, two areas that 
offered particular opportunities for grand scale corruption at that 
time were foreign donor assistance and privatization of state-owned 
enterprises.  As Mongolia later embarked on further policy changes 
to institutionalize capitalistic practices, corruption reared its 
head in the process of privatizing public land.  As the economy 
continues to develop, emerging areas for corruption include the 
banking and mining sectors.  There also are several areas that 
provide stable and consistent opportunities for corruption, both 
grand and administrative in nature, such as for procurement 
opportunities, issuance of permits and licenses, customs, 
inspections, the justice sector, among high-level elected and 
appointed officials, and in the conduct a variety of day-to-day 
citizen- and business-to-government transactions, notably in 
education, health care, and city services. 
 
Despite the fact that few of the conditions to prevent corruption 
from getting worse are in place, the situation has not reached the 
levels that are evident in many other countries with contexts and 
histories similar to that of Mongolia. Perhaps more importantly, 
there are a number of efforts underway to actively combat 
corruption, including: 
 
--Government commitments to international anti-corruption regimes 
and protocols, such as the Anti-Corruption Plan of the Asian 
Development Bank/Organization of Economic Cooperation and 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000029  004.2 OF 011 
 
 
Development (ADB/OECD) and the United Nations Convention Against 
Corruption (UNCAC); 
 
--Development of a National Program for Combating Corruption and 
formation of a National Council for coordinating the Program and a 
Parliamentary Anti-Corruption Working Group; 
 
--Implementation of an anti-corruption law that has included the 
formation of an independent anti-corruption body; 
 
--Short- and medium-term anti-corruption advocacy and "watchdog" 
programs initiated by civil society organizations, often with 
international donor support. 
 
There is, in fact, time for Mongolians and the international 
community to nurture these efforts and take further action before 
corruption grows too large to rein in.  In general, the main need in 
Mongolia is to develop effective disincentives for corrupt behavior 
at both the administrative and political levels.  In its broadest 
configuration, this implies a strategy of increasing transparency 
and effective citizen oversight, as well as intra-governmental 
checks and balances.  Without these major changes, administrative 
reforms may provide some small improvements, but they are unlikely 
to solve the problem. Specifically, the aforementioned 
USAID-sponsored report of 2005 makes several strategic 
recommendations, which remain relevant in 2010, including: 
 
--Diplomatic engagement focused on keeping anti-corruption issues on 
the policy agenda, promoting implementation of existing laws related 
to anti-corruption, and highlighting the need for further measures 
to promote transparency and improved donor coordination; 
 
--General programmatic recommendations to address conflict of 
interest, transparency/access to information, civil service reforms, 
and the independent anti-corruption body, with a definitive focus on 
engaging civil society and promoting public participation utilizing 
UNCAC as a framework; 
 
--Specific programmatic recommendations to address loci of 
corruption, such as citizen- and business-to-government 
transactions, procurement, privatization, customs, land use, mining, 
banking, the justice sector, and the political and economic elite 
 
In addition, the reputable international anti-corruption NGO 
Transparency International (TI) opened a national chapter in 
Mongolia in 2004 (for more information, see: www.transparency.org). 
U.S. technical advisors are working with TI to train Mongolian staff 
to monitor corruption and to advocate on behalf of anti-corruption 
legislation and, TI first included Mongolia in its annual 
"Perceptions of Corruption" survey in September 2004.  In that 
initial survey, Mongolia ranked 85 out of 145 countries and its 
score of 3 on the Corruption Perception Index was "poor." (TI's CPI 
Score relates to "perceptions" of the degree of corruption as seen 
by business people and country analysts and ranges between 10 
(highly clean) and 0 (highly corrupt). TI's 2005 Survey ranked 
Mongolia 85 out 158; and again Mongolia earned a "poor" score of 3. 
In TI's 2006 survey, Mongolia had dropped to 99 out of 163 
countries, receiving a score of 2.8-poor.  In 2007, Mongolia was 
still 99 but out of 179 nations and had achieved a score of 3.0, a 
slight uptick but still poor.  2008 saw Mongolia drop to 102 out 180 
nations, maintaining its poor score of 3.  2009 found Mongolia 
dropping to 124 out of 180 nations, and declining to a poorer score 
of 2.7, In short, Mongolia has declined. 
 
One factor raising concerns about Mongolia's commitment to fight 
corruption is the series of amnesties granted to Mongolians found 
guilty of corruption or those under investigation for abuses.  These 
amnesties happen about every three years, usually through 
presidential legislative action, with the most recent occurring in 
late 2009.  Because they allow corrupt officials and those who 
enable them to avoid substantial prison time and fines for their 
improper acts, these amnesties are demoralizing for the IAAC and the 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000029  005.2 OF 011 
 
 
public, who question the value of tackling corruption with a 
government lacking the will to hold malefactors to account. 
 
Current Anti-Corruption Law 
 
In 2006, Parliament passed an Anti-Corruption Law (ACL), a 
significant milestone in Mongolia's efforts against corruption.  The 
legislation had been under consideration since 1999. 
The ACL created an independent investigative body, the Independent 
Authority Against Corruption (IAAC).  The IAAC has four sections. 
The Prevention and Education Section works to prevent corruption and 
educate the public on anti-corruption legal requirements. The 
Investigation Section receives corruption cases and executes 
investigations. The third section collects, checks, and analyzes the 
legally required property and income statements of government 
officials.   The fourth section, the IAAC's Secretariat, handle s 
administrative tasks.  The IAAC formally began operations in August 
2007.  (For a review of  the IAAC's activities from its inception 
through late 2008 and a general assessment of the public's current 
views of corruption in Mongolia see the series of Mongolia 
Corruption Benchmarking Surveys prepared for USAID Mongolia: 
http://www.usaid.gov/mn;  and by The Asia Foundation Mongolia: 
http://asiafoundation.org 
 
Anti-Corruption Resources Available to U.S. Citizens about the 
U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act: In 1977, the United States 
enacted the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), which makes it 
unlawful for a U.S. person, and certain foreign issuers of 
securities, to make a corrupt payment to foreign public officials 
for the purpose of obtaining or retaining business for or with, or 
directing business to, any person. The FCPA also applies to foreign 
firms and persons who take any act in furtherance of such a corrupt 
payment while in the United States. For more detailed information on 
the FCPA, see the FCPA Lay-Person's Guide at: 
http://www.justice.gov/criminal 
 
Guidance on the U.S. FCPA: The Department of Justice's (DOJ) FCPA 
Opinion Procedure enables U.S. firms and individuals to request a 
statement of the Justice Department's present enforcement intentions 
under the anti-bribery provisions of the FCPA regarding any proposed 
business conduct.  The details of the opinion procedure are 
available on DOJ's Fraud Section Website at 
www.justice.gov/criminal/fraud/fcpa. Although the Department of 
Commerce has no enforcement role with respect to the FCPA, it 
supplies general guidance to U.S. exporters who have questions about 
the FCPA and about international developments concerning the FCPA. 
For further information, see the Office of the Chief Counsel for 
International Counsel, U.S. Department of Commerce, Website, at 
http://www.ogc.doc.gov.  More general information on the FCPA is 
available at the Websites listed below. 
 
Other Assistance for U.S. Businesses: The U.S. Department of 
Commerce offers several services to aid U.S. businesses seeking to 
address business-related corruption issues.  For example, the U.S. 
and Foreign Commercial Service can provide services that may assist 
U.S. companies in conducting their due diligence as part of the 
company's overarching compliance program when choosing business 
partners or agents overseas.  The U.S. Foreign and Commercial 
Service can be reached directly through its offices in every major 
U.S. and foreign city, or through its Website at www.trade.gov/cs. 
 
 
The Departments of Commerce and State provide worldwide support for 
qualified U.S. companies bidding on foreign government contracts 
through the Commerce Department's Advocacy Center and State's Office 
of Commercial and Business Affairs.  Problems, including alleged 
corruption by foreign governments or competitors, encountered by 
U.S. companies in seeking such foreign business opportunities can be 
brought to the attention of appropriate U.S. government officials, 
including local embassy personnel and through the Department of 
Commerce Trade Compliance Center "Report A Trade Barrier" Website at 
tcc.export.gov/Report_a_Barrier/index.asp. 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000029  006.2 OF 011 
 
 
 
Exporters and investors should be aware that generally all countries 
prohibit the bribery of their public officials, and prohibit their 
officials from soliciting bribes under domestic laws.   Most 
countries are required to criminalize such bribery and other acts of 
corruption by virtue of being parties to various international 
conventions discussed above. 
 
Other Instruments: It is U.S. Government policy to promote good 
governance, including host country implementation and enforcement of 
anti-corruption laws and policies pursuant to their obligations 
under international agreements. Since enactment of the FCPA, the 
United States has been instrumental to the expansion of the 
international framework to fight corruption.  Several significant 
components of this framework are the OECD Convention on Combating 
Bribery of Foreign Public Officials in International Business 
Transactions (OECD Antibribery Convention), the United Nations 
Convention against Corruption (UN Convention), the Inter-American 
Convention against Corruption (OAS Convention), the Council of 
Europe Criminal and Civil Law Conventions, and a growing list of 
U.S. free trade agreements.  Mongolia is party to the UN Convention 
Against Corruption and prohibits the bribery and solicitation of its 
public officials. 
 
OECD Antibribery Convention: The OECD Antibribery Convention entered 
into force in February 1999.  As of December 2009, 38 nations are 
party to it, including the United States (see http://www.oecd.org). 
Major exporters China, India, and Russia are not parties, although 
the U.S. Government strongly endorses their eventual accession to 
the Convention.  The Convention obligates the Parties to criminalize 
bribery of foreign public officials in the conduct of international 
business. The United States meets its international obligations 
under the OECD Antibribery Convention through the U.S. FCPA. 
Mongolia is not a party to the OECD Antibribary convention. 
 
UN Convention: The UN Anticorruption Convention entered into force 
on December 14, 2005, and there are 143 parties to it as of December 
2009. The UN Convention is the first global comprehensive 
international anticorruption agreement.  The UN Convention requires 
countries to establish criminal and other offences to cover a wide 
range of acts of corruption.  The UN Convention goes beyond previous 
anticorruption instruments, covering a broad range of issues ranging 
from basic forms of corruption such as bribery and solicitation, 
embezzlement, trading in influence to the concealment and laundering 
of the proceeds of corruption.  The Convention contains 
transnational business bribery provisions that are functionally 
similar to those in the OECD Antibribery Convention and contains 
provisions on private sector auditing and books and records 
requirements.  Other provisions address matters such as prevention, 
international cooperation, and asset recovery.  Mongolia is a member 
of the UN Convention Against Corruption. 
 
Local Laws: U.S. firms should familiarize themselves with local 
anticorruption laws, and, where appropriate, seek legal counsel. 
While the U.S. Department of Commerce cannot provide legal advice on 
local laws, the Department's U.S. and Foreign Commercial Service can 
provide assistance with navigating the host country's legal system 
and obtaining a list of local legal counsel. 
 
Anti-Corruption Resources: Documents and Contacts 
 
Resources for combating corruption in global markets include the 
following: 
 
--Information about the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), 
including a "Lay-Person's Guide to the FCPA" is available at the 
U.S. Department of Justice's Website at: 
http://www.justice.gov/criminal/fraud/fcpa. 
 
--Information about the OECD Antibribery Convention including links 
to national implementing legislation and monitoring reports is 
available at: http://www.oecd.org.  See also new Antibribery 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000029  007.2 OF 011 
 
 
Recommendation and Good Practice Guidance Annex for companies: 
http://www.oecd.org 
 
For general information about anticorruption initiatives, such as 
the OECD Convention and the FCPA, including translations of the 
statute into several languages, go to the Department of Commerce 
Office of the Chief Counsel for International Commerce at: 
http://www.ogc.doc.gov. 
 
--Transparency International (TI) publishes an annual Corruption 
Perceptions Index (CPI).  The CPI measures the perceived level of 
public-sector corruption in 180 countries and territories around the 
world.  CPI is available at: http://www.transparency.org.  TI also 
publishes an annual Global Corruption Report which provides a 
systematic evaluation of the state of corruption around the world. 
It includes an in-depth analysis of a focal theme, a series of 
country reports that document major corruption related events and 
developments from all continents and an overview of the latest 
research findings on anti-corruption diagnostics and tools.  See 
http://www.transparency.org. 
 
--The World Bank Institute publishes Worldwide Governance Indicators 
(WGI),which six dimensions of governance in 212 countries, including 
Voice and Accountability, Political Stability and Absence of 
Violence, Government Effectiveness, Regulatory Quality, Rule of Law 
and Control of Corruption.  See http://info.worldbank.org.   The 
World Bank Business Environment and Enterprise Performance Surveys 
may also be of interest and are available at: 
http://go.worldbank.org. 
 
--The World Economic Forum publishes the Global Enabling Trade 
Report that assesses both border administration transparency 
(focused on bribe payments and corruption) and corruption and the 
regulatory environment: http://www.weforum.org 
 
--For additional information on corruption see the U.S. State 
Department's annual Human Rights Report at http://www.state.gov. 
--Global Integrity, a nonprofit organization, publishes its annual 
Global Integrity Report, which provides indicators for 92 countries 
with respect to governance and anti-corruption. The report 
highlights the strengths and weaknesses of national level 
anti-corruption systems. The report is available at: 
http://report.globalintegrity.org/ 
 
A.14 BILATERAL INVESTMENT AGREEMENTS 
 
(NOTE: Table of bi-lateral investment agreements entered into by 
Mongolia deleted due to requirements of cable format. END NOTE.) 
 
Taxation issues of Concern to American Investors 
 
Taxation remains a key concern for Americans, other foreign 
investors, and Mongolian domestic investors and businesses.  2009 
saw some changes in the Mongolian tax system, most of which, with 
the exception of the revocation of the value-added tax exemption for 
mining equipment,  were greeted positively by most foreign and 
domestic investor in Mongolia.  Observers noted that recent 
experience with tax-code revisions does suggest that both the GOM 
and Parliament are amenable to revising legislation if the economic 
benefits to the state, the public, and investors can be proven. 
 
Windfall Profits Tax on Copper and Gold Sunsets in 2011 
 
Since passage in 2006, the Windfall Profits Tax Law has generated 
criticism regarding the depth of 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.  This bill was passed in six days without any 
consultation with outside stakeholders on any its provisions.  The 
entire process raised concerns among investors about the stability 
and transparency of Mongolia's legislative and regulatory 
environment, which intervening years and experience with other 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000029  008.2 OF 011 
 
 
non-transparently passed legislation did little to alleviate. 
 
The WPT imposes a 68percent tax on the profits from gold and copper 
mining respectively, and for gold originally kicked in when gold the 
price for gold 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 68percent tax rate, when combined with other Mongolian taxes, 
makes the effective tax 100percent on all proceeds above the copper 
threshold price. 
 
The recent Oyu Tolgoi 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, the Parliament agreed to amend 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 introduces appropriate deduction opportunities 
for corporate investment.  The current law allows firms to deduct 
more types of legitimate business expenditures: training, business 
travel, cafeteria expenses, etc.  The current law levels the playing 
field between foreign and domestic investors, eliminating the 
majority of discriminatory tax exemptions and holidays, most of 
which favored international investors. 
 
2009 changes into the tax code's treatment of exemptions present 
something of a mixed bag for investors.  On the down side, 
Mongolia's Parliament revoked an exemption available on value-added 
tax (VAT) taxes of 10percent on equipment used to bring a given mine 
into production.  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 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 
10percent higher than they would otherwise be, impairing 
competitiveness and dramatically varying from global practice. 
 
On the plus side, Parliament revised loss-carry forward provisions, 
extending from two (2) years to eight (8) years the ability to 
deduct losses from taxes after incurring a loss.  Like the revision 
of the WPT, this change is also a condition precedent of passing the 
OT Agreement.  Most investors find eight years sufficient for many 
Mongolian investments that require impose long, expensive 
development horizons before producing any sort of profit. 
 
Unfinished Taxation Business: Improving Institutions and Practices 
 
As reported in the 2009 Investment Climate Statement and Country 
Commercial Guide, both the GOM and Parliament has been intending to 
take up additional tax reform measures since 2007 but have made no 
substantive progress since promising additional reforms.  These 
measures include revisions to the law on customs and customs 
tariffs.  While the exact nature of the proposed changes to the 
customs law remains murky, the GOM states that changes will be 
consistent with Mongolia's WTO obligations and best practices. 
 
Despite overall solid, positive changes, international financial 
institutions warn that tax reforms by themselves are insufficient to 
improve Mongolia's business environment.  They report that reform 
must 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. 
 
Specifically, tax authorities charged with enforcing the tax codes 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000029  009.2 OF 011 
 
 
require a more customer-based approach to dealing with their 
business clientele and a more detailed and rigorously enforced 
regulatory framework under which to audit company accounts.  Many 
foreign and domestic investors argue that the lack of such a clear, 
implementable code of ethics and enforceable set of guidelines leads 
to arbitrary, capricious, or predatory tax audits. 
 
A.15 OPIC AND OTHER INVESTMENT INSURANCE PROGRAMS 
 
The U.S. government's Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC: 
(www.opic.gov) offers loans and political risk insurance to American 
investors involved in most sectors of the Mongolian economy. 
 
The U.S. Export-Import Bank (EXIM: www.exim.gov)offers programs in 
Mongolia for short-, medium-, and long-term transactions in the 
public sector and for short- and medium-term transactions in the 
private sector. 
 
Mongolia is a member of the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency 
(MIGA: www.miga.org). 
 
A. 16 LABOR 
 
Mongolia's labor pool is generally well educated, relatively young, 
and adaptable, but shortages exist in most professional categories 
requiring advanced degrees or training. Only time and investment in 
education and training will remedy this deficit of trained skilled 
labor.  Unskilled labor is sufficiently available.  Shortages exist 
in both vocational and professional categories because Mongolians 
who obtain such skills frequently go abroad to find higher wages. 
Foreign-invested companies are dealing with this situation by 
providing in-country training to their staffs, raising salaries to 
retain employees, or hiring expatriate workers to provide skills and 
expertise unavailable in the local market. In addition, the USG 
funded Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) is underwriting a 
five-year training and vocational education program (TVET) to 
develop sustainable programs to help Mongolia meet its needs for 
skilled blue- collar workers (http://www.mca.mn or 
http://www.mcc.gov). 
 
Mongolian labor law is not particularly restrictive.  Investors can 
locate and hire workers without using hiring agencies -- as long as 
hiring practices are consistent with Mongolian Labor Law.  However, 
Mongolian law requires companies to employ Mongolian workers in 
certain labor categories whenever a Mongolian can perform the task 
as well as a foreigner.  This law generally applies to unskilled 
labor categories and not areas where a high degree of technical 
expertise nonexistent in Mongolia is required.  The law does provide 
an escape hatch for all employers.  Should an employer seek to hire 
a non-Mongolian laborer and cannot obtain a waiver from the Ministry 
of Labor for that employee, the employer can pay a fee of USD 140.00 
per employee per month.  Depending on a project's importance, the 
Ministry of Labor can exempt employers from 50percent of the waiver 
fees per worker. 
 
Foreign and domestic investors consistently argue that they bear too 
much of the social security costs for each domestic and foreign hire 
under the amended 2008 Social Insurance Law enacted in July 2008. 
Foreign employees became liable for social insurance taxes if they 
reside within Mongolia for 181 days within a 365 day period.  Under 
this law, foreign and domestic workers pay up to 108,000 tugrik per 
month (USD 74) for this tax, no matter their respective rates of 
pay.  Employers must pay a tax equivalent to 13percent of the annual 
wage on both domestic and foreign workers.  Given that state 
pensions have yet to broach even USD 100, employers argue that 
pensions are not commensurate with worker contributions, especially 
those of highly-paid ex-patriot employees.  In addition, workers 
must pay in for twenty years in order to be vested, highly unlikely 
for many ex-patriot employees, who reside in Mongolia for less than 
three years on average.  Local and foreign business associations are 
attempting to work with both the government and Parliament to 
address these perceived inequalities. 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000029  010.2 OF 011 
 
 
 
ILO conventions 
 
Mongolia has ratified 15 ILO conventions (http://www.ilo.org) (NOTE: 
Table of ILO conventions ratified by Mongolia deleted due to 
requirements of cable format. END NOTE.) 
 
A. 17 FOREIGN TRADE ZONES/FREE PORTS 
 
The Mongolian government launched its free trade zone (FTZ) program 
in 2004. Currently there are two FTZ areas located along the 
Mongolia spur of the trans-Siberian highway: one in the north at the 
Russia-Mongolia border town of Altanbulag and the other in the south 
at the Chinese-Mongolia border at the town of Zamyn-Uud.  Both FTZs 
are inactive, with no development at either site.  The port of entry 
of Tsagaan Nuur in Bayan-Olgii province is being considered as the 
site of a third FTZ. 
 
Management for the Zamyn-Uud Free Trade Zone (ZUFTZ) was originally 
tendered to a Chinese firm.  In 2006, the GOM voided the agreement 
for non-compliance with the terms of the tender.  The GOM 
re-tendered the management contract in 2006, but later voided that 
contract, alleging that the current holder of the management rights 
in the ZUFTZ had failed to live up to the terms of the tender. 
 
So far, there are no indications that government will not keep 
promises to open the zone to any who satisfy the relevant legal 
requirements.  However, there are concerns about the Mongolian free 
trade zones in general and Zamyn-Uud in particular.  In April 2004, 
the USAID sponsored Economic Policy Reform and Competitiveness 
Project (EPRC: http://www.eprc-chemonics.biz/) made the following 
observations of Mongolia's FTZ Program.  In 2010, these issues 
remain concerns: 
 
--Benchmarking of Mongolia's FTZ Program against current successful 
international practices shows deficiencies in the legal and 
regulatory framework as well as in the process being followed to 
establish FTZs in the country. 
 
--Lack of implementing regulations and procedural definitions 
encapsulated in transparency and predictability quotient required to 
implement key international best practices. 
 
--A process of due diligence, including a cost-benefit analysis, has 
not been completed for the proposed Zamyn-Uud FTZ. 
 
--Identifiable funding is not in place to meet off-site 
infrastructure requirements for Zamyn-Uud and Altanbulag sites. 
 
--Deviations from international best practices in the process of 
launching FTZs risks repeating mistakes made in other countries and 
may lead to "hidden costs" or the provision of subsidies that the 
government of Mongolia did not foresee or which will have to granted 
at the expense of other high priority needs. 
 
A. 18 FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT STATISTICS: 
 
The Foreign Investment and Foreign Trade Agency (FIFTA) provides 
most of the data for tracking FDI in Mongolia.  However, the data 
has limitations: 
 
Incomplete reporting 
 
Many foreign firms provide FIFTA with inaccurate or incomplete data 
on their annual investment amounts.  FIFTA's registration regime 
requires companies to document business plans and total FDI for the 
coming year.  FIFTA uses these amounts to determine FDI for the 
year.  However, firms reportedly believe FIFTA may not be able to 
guarantee the confidentiality of proprietary business information, 
and so they withhold complete data on their actual activities. 
 
Mongolia suffers from promised investment that never materializes or 
 
ULAANBAATA 00000029  011.2 OF 011 
 
 
which comes in at a lower level than originally stated.  FIFTA does 
not update reports to account for these or other changes to 
investments during the year. (See Chapter 6, Section A.5: 
Performance Requirements and Incentives). 
 
Many of Mongolia's largest foreign- owned or foreign-invested 
entities are in the mining sector, which because of a quirk of the 
current Minerals Law of Mongolia are not necessarily defined as 
foreign-invested firms.  The current minerals law specifies that 
only domestically registered mining firms can have mining licenses 
registered in their names, which means that foreign investments 
associated with mining may not be recorded by FIFTA, even though the 
investment is demonstrably foreign.  For example, the investment by 
Ivanhoe Mines Mongolia (a Canadian company) into Mongolia has 
reached nearly USD 1 billion, yet this investment is not recorded 
among the data provided by FIFTA. 
 
Data not Available 
 
Neither FIFTA nor any other Mongolian agency to our knowledge tracks 
Mongolia's direct investment abroad. 
 
(NOTE: Mongolian FDI statistics deleted due to requirements of cable 
format. END NOTE.) 
 
ADDLETON