Mongolia

Mendsaikhany Enkhsaikhan

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Focus Area(s)
Ref Batch Number
5
Country of Reform
Interviewers
David Hausman
Name
Mendsaikhany Enkhsaikhan
Interviewee's Position
Former Prime Minister
Interviewee's Organization
Mongolia
Language
English
Nationality of Interviewee
Mongolian
Town/City
Ulaanbaatar
Country
Date of Interview
Reform Profile
No
Abstract

Mendsaikhany Enkhsaikhan, the former prime minister of Mongolia, discusses the introduction of the country’s first civil service reforms.  He explains the civil service issues Mongolia faced after the transition to democracy and touches upon some of the strategies taken to address them.  He discusses working with the United Nations and the U.S. Agency for International Development, and how Mongolia tried to model many of its reforms on the steps the government of New Zealand was taking.  Enkhsaikhan emphasizes that the largest issue the government faced was capacity building, and he explains the difficulty of attracting high quality workers away from the private sector.  He briefly touches on steps taken to build support for these reforms within the different levels of government.

Case Study:  From Central Planning to Performance Contracts, New Public Management in Mongolia, 1996-2009

Profile

Mendsaikhany Enkhsaikhan was prime minister of Mongolia from 1996 to 1998.  He represented the Mongolian Democratic Union Coalition, making him the first prime minister in over 80 years to come from a party other than the Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party.  He later held the positions of deputy prime minister and chairman of the Democratic Party.  Among many high profile positions, Enkhsaikhan was chief of staff to Mongolia’s first president from 1993 to1996.  He was directly involved in major economic reforms, including the introduction of private property and the privatization of state-owned resources.  Enkhsaikhan holds a doctorate in economics from the State University in Kiev, Ukraine.

Full Audio File Size
60MB
Full Audio Title
Mendsaikhany Enkhsaikhan Interview

From Central Planning to Performance Contracts, New Public Management in Mongolia, 1996-2009

Author
David Hausman
Focus Area(s)
Country of Reform
Abstract

In 1996, Mongolia’s newly elected government, led by a group of market-oriented politicians, decided to reform civil service on the New Zealand New Public Management model, which required managers to sign contracts promising results in exchange for freedom to spend their budgets as they chose. The reforms were intended to modernize a civil service that, while legally changed since democratization in 1990, retained many of the characteristics, and staff, of the previous Soviet-modeled system. Reformers confronted a lack of robust accountability procedures, salary arrears and a lack of central control over local expenditures. The Democratic Coalition government, led by an economic team strongly committed to market-oriented reforms, settled on the contract-based New Public Management model as a way of preserving agency-level decentralization while making agencies’ managers directly accountable to the national government. When enacted, the system met with difficulty at every stage: in specifying outputs for agencies and individuals, in measuring performance, and in rewarding good performance. By 2009, thirteen years after the reforms started, officials reported that the contracts remained largely a formality.

David Hausman wrote this case study based on interviews conducted in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, in December 2009. 

Associated Interview(s):  Mendsaikhany Enkhsaikhan