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Showing items 1 through 9 of 31.
  1. Library Resource
    February, 2015
    Mongolia

    The City of Ulaanbaatar (UB) is
    undergoing a historic transformation toward market-driven
    urban development. This growth remains strongly influenced
    by city policy decisions that affect the supply and location
    of land for public and private uses. Private investment is
    concentrated in well-serviced land located in the central
    portion of the city and along major transportation
    corridors, which represent a small part of the total built

  2. Library Resource
    Reports & Research
    December, 2015
    Mongolia

    Mongolia’s ongoing economic transition generates levels of uncertainty that often inhibit investments in
    productivity and marketing improvements on the part of producers and processors. This study was undertaken to identify gaps in policies, laws, regulations, and practices from production
    to the consumer end point, and to stimulate discussions about how to leverage the agriculture sector’s
    potential contributions to national development objectives.

  3. Library Resource
    December, 2015
    Mongolia

    The magnitude of risks facing Mongolian agriculture has made the sector’s
    development extraordinarily volatile over the last 25 years as it underwent decollectivization.
    Livestock in particular has seen rapid and largely unsustainable
    rates of growth in terms of numbers of animals and herders, and in so doing has
    become acutely vulnerable to the severe winter weather events known as dzuds.
    Periodic droughts and other production risks have also affected the country’s
    much smaller crop agriculture, much of which is geared for the production of

  4. Library Resource
    October, 2015
    Mongolia

    The report begins with a summary of
    programs reviewed, a description of the PMT targeting
    system, and the profile of individuals in the database. It
    then presents key findings from the review of budgets and
    the analysis of SW Admin/PMT data on program coverage and
    distributional equity of program benefits. The report
    concludes with a discussion of policy implications and
    recommendations that emerged from the key findings and the

  5. Library Resource
    March, 2016
    Mongolia

    From 2005 to 2013, a mining boom quickly
    promoted Mongolia from a low-income to a middle-income
    country. Although the World Bank Group strategy initially
    overlooked the challenge of the mining boom, the new country
    management team that came on board in 2005 decided to
    prioritize mining issues in a more selective framework. This
    involved taking a set of bold steps to support Bank Group
    engagement in the extractive industry, including basing for

  6. Library Resource
    January, 2015
    Mongolia

    This economy profile for Doing Business
    2015 presents the 11 Doing Business indicators for Mongolia.
    To allow for useful comparison, the profile also provides
    data for other selected economies (comparator economies) for
    each indicator. Doing Business 2015 is the 12th edition in a
    series of annual reports measuring the regulations that
    enhance business activity and those that constrain it.
    Economies are ranked on their ease of doing business; for

  7. Library Resource
    December, 2015
    Mongolia

    With global food crises and food price volatility in recent years, agricultural subsidies have once
    again gained prominence as a policy instrument in many developing countries. In Mongolia too,
    subsidies to the agriculture sector mainly through government budgetary transfers, have
    increased over time. These gained prominence in 2008 when a global, regional (the drought in
    Russia, and Kazakhstan, the two main suppliers to Mongolia), and the national food production

  8. Library Resource
    February, 2015
    Mongolia

    Chapter one summarizes the scope of the
    study and outlines its key objectives. It explains the
    rationale for collecting data on SMEs in Mongolia in general
    and women-owned SMEs in particular. It also provides
    recommendations for integrating the insights form the study
    into the on-the-ground practice of SME banking, as well as
    potential interventions on the regulatory and policy level.
    Chapter two begins with the analysis of the general

  9. Library Resource
    February, 2014
    Mongolia

    Ulaanbaatar's (UB) population has
    swollen from half a million in 2001 to approximately 1.2
    million in 2011, accounting for over 40 percent of the
    country's population. This trend is likely to continue
    as economic growth is increasingly concentrated in UB. With
    its growing population and concerns in rising inequality,
    the city is facing increasing pressure to maintain and
    expand service provision (especially infrastructure). The

  10. Library Resource
    June, 2014
    Mongolia

    This economy profile presents the Doing
    Business indicators for Mongolia. In a series of annual
    reports, Doing Business assesses regulations affecting
    domestic firms in 189 economies and ranks the economies in
    10 areas of business regulation, such as starting a
    business, resolving insolvency and trading across borders.
    This year's report data cover regulations measured from
    June 2012 through May 2013. The report is the 11th edition

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