Mongolia might face 'major macroeconomic instability'
Mongolia might face 'major macroeconomic instability', says top analyst
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Mongolia might face 'major macroeconomic instability',
says top analyst by Kanika Saigal Against the backdrop of a more friendly
posture towards international investors, Mongolia’s commodity-reliant economy
is poised for more cyclical volatility, warns a top central Asian investor.
Further reading Mongolia’s sovereign bond has teething problems Mongolia bond
sets off EM bond bubble concerns Markets lag Mongolia’s mining rise Mongolia’s
economy faces macroeconomic headwinds this year as drivers for expansion –
credit growth and commodities – soften against the backdrop of an imbalanced
economy, warns a top Mongolian investor. The comments come despite a relaxation
in Mongolia’s investment law established last May – aimed at encouraging a
resurgence in foreign direct investment – which has restored confidence in the
country's medium- and long-term growth prospects. Alisher Ali, founder and
chairman of Silk Road Finance Alisher Ali, founder and chairman of Silk Road
Finance, a frontier markets investment group, warns that the country – rich in
natural resources, including gold, copper and coking coal – faces weak growth
this year amid a slowdown in commodity demand. “The growth slowdown in China
and the decline in commodity prices globally could have a negative effect on
the economy in Mongolia,” says Ali. Mongolian export revenues have already been
hit. In 2012, China accounted for 92.6% of Mongolian exports, totalling $4.38
billion. In Mongolia, exports declined nearly 8% year-to-date in the first
quarter this year. “A recovery in export prices will depend on demand for
commodities from China,” says Ali. Indeed, the decline in commodity prices and
exports hit government revenues at a time of substantial infrastructure and
development projects. “Between 2010 and 2012, government expenditure nearly
doubled," says Ali. "At the same time, government revenue increased
by only 60%." In 2012, the budget deficit reached a decade high of 8.4% of
GDP. Although Mongolia is expected to maintain one of the highest economic
growth rates in the world, uncertainty surrounding economic prospects encouraged
the World Bank to lower its estimate for Mongolia’s economic expansion in 2013
to 13% compared with an earlier forecast of 16.2%. In the first quarter of the
year, the economy expanded at a slower-than-expected pace at 7.7% year-on-year
compared with 17% over the corresponding period in 2012. Banking is also under
pressure. The sector, which accounts for more than 95% of the financial system
in terms of assets, grew by 28% in 2012, reaching MNT11,992 billion ($8.6
billion), down from a record 50% increase in 2011. “While expansionary fiscal
policy and increasing funding demand from household sectors supported growth
[in the banking sector], the drop in growth was largely due to the slowdown in
economic growth because of lower coal prices and volumes in exports,” says Ali.
Mongolia has also borrowed more than $2 billion in international debt markets
to finance infrastructure projects, close to 20% of GDP. “With current spending
trend continuing, the government is likely to face the need to balance its budget,
whilst paying back foreign debt,” says Ali. “Mongolia needs a wide political
consensus and action on fiscal discipline or face major macroeconomic
instability in coming years.” Reversing the trend Mongolia made progress when
it relaxed a foreign investment law established last May. The Strategic
Entities Foreign Investment Law limited international investors to 49% stakes
in sectors, including the mining industry, after approval from the government.
Restrictions on investment in Mongolia saw FDI into the country drop
dramatically, and local investors lacked the ability to support the mining
sector and subsequent economic growth. In 2012, investment into the country
fell by 17% to $3.9 billion. An amendment passed on April 19 will make
privately owned companies exempt from the law and aims to kick-start investment
into the country again. The revision of the investment law sends a good signal
to international investors and an important about-face on policies regarding
resource nationalism, says Ali, adding: “But although the law has been
partially reversed, one of the major challenges faced by Mongolia is to rebuild
investor confidence.” Production from the Oyu Tolgoi mine, one of the world’s
largest copper mines and Mongolia’s single largest investment project, is aimed
at supporting the economy. The government expects export volumes of copper to
nearly double and gold more than double, primarily due to the start of
production at Oyu Tolgoi in 2013. Although Silk Road Finance is bullish on the
country's medium- and long-term growth prospects, Ali warned that fiscal
indiscipline, growing budgetary pressures, structural inflation and a cooling
banking sector pose headwinds for the economy after recent years of breakneck
expansion.
Against the backdrop of
a more friendly posture towards international investors, Mongolia’s
commodity-reliant economy is poised for more cyclical volatility, warns a
top central Asian
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