MongoliaAgriculture
In the late 1980s, agriculture was a small but critical
sector of the Mongolian economy. In 1985 agriculture accounted
for only 18.3 percent of national income and 33.8 percent of the
labor force (see
table 7, Appendix). Nevertheless, agriculture
remained economically important because much of Mongolia's
industry processed agricultural products--foodstuffs, timber, and
animal products, such as skins and hides--for domestic
consumption and for export. In 1986 agriculture supplied nearly
60 percent of Mongolia's exports
(see Industry;
Foreign Economic Relations and Comecon
, this ch.).
Mongolian agriculture developed slowly. An abortive attempt
to collectivize all arads occurred in the early 1930s;
efforts to encourage voluntary cooperatives and arad
producers' associations followed. In the 1930s, the government
also began developing state farms, and by 1940 there were ten
state farms and ninety-one agricultural cooperatives. In 1937 the
Soviet Union provided ten hay-making machine stations to prepare
fodder for livestock. In 1940 agriculture represented 61 percent
of national income, and it employed approximately 90 percent of
the labor force.
In the 1950s, agriculture began to adopt its present
structure and modern techniques, based in part on material and
technical assistance from the Soviet Union and East European
countries. In the 1950s, the hay-making machine stations were
reorganized as livestock machine stations. In 1955 negdels
replaced the arad producers' associations. By 1959 the
state had accomplished the collectivization of agriculture. In
ten years, agricultural cooperatives had more than doubled, from
139 in 1950 to 354 by 1960. Ownership of livestock and sown areas
changed dramatically as a result of collectivization. In 1950,
according to Mongolian government statistics, state farms and
other state organizations owned approximately 0.9 percent of
livestock and 37.8 percent of sown areas; negdels had
about 0.5 percent of livestock and no sown lands; and private
owners some held 98.3 percent of livestock and 62.2 percent of
sown areas. In 1960 state farms and other state organizations
owned 2.7 percent of livestock; negdels, 73.8 percent; and
individual negdel members, 23.5 percent. The state sector
owned 77.5 percent of sown lands, and the cooperative sector the
remainder.
By 1960 agriculture's share of national income had fallen to
22.9 percent, but agriculture still employed 60.8 percent of the
work force. After 1960 the number of state farms increased, state
fodder supply farms were established, the number of
negdels decreased through consolidation, and
interagricultural cooperative associations were organized to
facilitate negdel specialization and cooperation. Mongolia
also began receiving large-scale agricultural assistance from the
Soviet Union and other East European countries after Mongolia's
1962 entry into Comecon. The Soviet Union, for example, assisted
in establishing and equipping several new state farms, and
Hungary helped with irrigation. In 1967 the Third Congress of
Agricultural Association Members founded the Union of
Agricultural Associations to supervise negdels and to
represent their interests to the government and to other
cooperative and social organizations. The union elected a central
council, the chairman of which was, ex officio, the minister of
agriculture; it also adopted a Model Charter to govern members'
rights and obligations. In 1969 the state handed over the
livestock machine stations to the negdels.
Negdels, which concentrated on livestock production,
were organized into brigad (brigades) and then into
suuri (bases), composed of several households. Each
suuri had its own equipment and production tasks.
Negdels adopted the Soviet system of herding, in which
arad households lived in permanent settlements rather than
traveling with their herds, as in the pastoral tradition
(see Pastoral Nomadism
, ch. 2). In 1985 the average negdel had
61,500 head of livestock, 438,500 hectares of land--of which
1,200 hectares was plowable land, 43 tractors, 2 grain
harvesters, and 18 motor vehicles; it harvested 500 tons of
grain. Individual negdel members were permitted to own
livestock. In mountain steppe pasture areas, ten head of
livestock per person, up to fifty head per household, were
allowed. In desert regions, fifteen head per person, up to
seventy-five head per household, were permitted. Private plots
also were allowed for negdel farmers.
State farms, compared with negdels, had more capital
invested, were more highly mechanized, and generally were located
in the most productive regions, or close to major mining and
industrial complexes. State farms engaged primarily in crop
production. In 1985 there were 52 state farms, 17 fodder supply
farms, and 255 negdels. In 1985 the average state farm
employed 500 workers; owned 26,200 head of livestock, 178,600
hectares of land--of which 15,400 hectares was plowable land, 265
tractors, 36 grain harvesters, and 40 motor vehicles; it
harvested 12,100 tons of grain.
In the late 1980s, several changes in governmental
organization occurred to facilitate agricultural development. In
October 1986, the Ministry of Agriculture absorbed the Ministry
of Water Economy, which had controlled irrigation. In December
1987, the Ministry of Agriculture, the Ministry of Forestry and
Woodworking, and the Ministry of Food and Light Industries were
abolished and two new ministries--the Ministry of Agriculture and
Food Industry, and the Ministry of Environmental Protection--were
established. Among the functions of the Ministry of Agriculture
and Food Industry were the further coordination of agriculture
and of industrial food processing to boost the food supply, and
the development on state farms of agro-industrial complexes,
which had processing plants for foodstuffs. The Sharin Gol state
farm, for example, grew fruits and vegetables, which then were
processed in the state farm's factories to produce dried fruit,
fruit juices, fruit and vegetable preserves, and pickled
vegetables. The Ministry of Environmental Protection incorporated
the Forestry and Hunting Economy Section of the former Ministry
of Forestry and Woodworking and the State Land and Water
Utilization and Protection Service of the former Ministry of
Agriculture
(see
fig. 9;
Forestry
, this ch.).
Figure 10. Agriculture and Forestry, 1985
Source: Based on information from USSR, Council of Ministers,
Main Administration of Geodesy and Cartography, Mongolskaia
Narodnaia Respublika, ekonomicheskaia karta dlia srednei
shkoly (Mongolian People's Republic Economic Map for the
Middle School), Moscow, 1985.
Data as of June 1989
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