MongoliaTourism
In the late 1980s, tourism played a minor role in Mongolia's
foreign economic relations. About 10,000 foreign visitors came
from communist, North American, and West European countries
annually. Mongolia has natural, historical, and cultural sites of
interest to foreign tourists, such as the Nemegt Valley's
"dinosaur graveyard," the ancient city of Karakorum, and the
medieval Erdene-Dzuu monastery. Hunting expeditions also are a
tourist attraction. The Foreign Tourist Office, Juulchin, which
was part of the Ministry of Foreign Economic Relations and Supply
in 1989, handled all foreign tourists.
Transportation
Prior to 1921, Mongolia had a primitive transportation system
consisting primarily of horse relay stations along ancient
caravan routes. Arad households supported this relay
system by paying a horse-relay duty. Draft animals carried
passengers and cargo. There were no hard surface roads,
railroads, or air transportation. Efforts to introduce a modern
transportation system began in 1925, when the government
established a state transportation committee with twelve trucks.
Soviet aid to Mongolia's transportation sector was inaugurated
the same year, with agreements for road repair and bridge
building, water transportation by the Soviet Selenge State
Shipping Line on the Selenge and the Orhon rivers, and
establishment of Mongolian air transport linking Ulaanbaatar and
Troitskosavsk in the Soviet Union. Construction of hard surface
roads also began in the late 1920s. In 19-29 the Fifth National
Great Hural nationalized the transportation network and
established the joint motor transport monopoly, Mongoltrans, with
the Soviet Union. The Soviet share of Mongoltrans devolved to
Mongolia in 1936. Railroad construction started in the late
1930s. A 43-kilometer, narrow-gauge (1.435 meters) railroad
linking Ulaanbaatar and the Nalayh coal mine opened in 1938; the
next year the Soviets built a 236-kilometer broad-gauge (1.524
meters) line connecting Choybalsan with Borzya, Soviet Union, on
the Trans-Siberian Railway. The first asphalt road, linking
Ulaanbaatar and Suhbaatar, was built in 1940. Development of the
transportation system reached a plateau in the early 1940s, when
the outbreak of World War II effectively interrupted Soviet
assistance. Despite the modernization of this sector, draft
animals remained the predominant form of transportation; in the
mid-1940s animals carried 70 percent of the freight, and motor
transport the rest.
Rapid development of the transportation sector resumed in the
late 1940s and the 1950s. In 1947 Soviet-aided railroad
construction was resumed with the building of the north-south
trans-Mongolia line. The first segment of this line, connecting
Ulan Ude, Soviet Union, with Ulaanbaatar, became operational in
1950. The second segment, linking the capital and the Chinese
border, was completed in 1955. The opening of the trans-Mongolia
line significantly altered transportation patterns in Mongolia:
the railroads assumed the bulk of freight transportation, freed
large numbers of motor vehicles and draft animals for use in
other parts of the country, and permitted the abolition of the
horse-relay duty in 1950. Because this line cut across the
economic center of the country, the economic benefits of its
opening were considerable. In the late 1950s, China rendered
Mongolia considerable assistance in road construction.
Since the 1960s, modernization of the transportation system
has been incremental compared with advances in previous decades.
Efforts have focused on extending hard-surface roadways, on
constructing railroad spurs to industrial facilities, on
improving rolling stock, on upgrading facilities, and on
increasing the capacity and the productivity of all forms of
transportation
(see
fig. 12).
Figure 12. Transportation, 1989
Data as of June 1989
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