Tradition And Technology: Lessons From Mongolia For Driving Inclusive Growth www.forbes.com
Mongolia’s vast steppes and nomadic heritage have long shaped the rhythms of life. Today, these traditions are evolving by the quiet revolution of digital finance. Where once nomads carried maps in their memory, now they navigate mobile apps.
Banks once meant distant branches, now they mean real-time access—even from remote pastures. According to our 2024 annual report, 99.4% of all banking transactions in Mongolia were conducted digitally in 2023. This is not just modernization; it is localization—technology woven into the cultural and geographic fabric of a nation.
The following lessons show how global banking leaders can use technology and tradition to drive real economic impact from remote communities to corporate boardrooms.
1. Use technology to connect and grow rural economies.
To extend business into remote areas, fostering digital literacy is crucial. Leaders should forecast infrastructure gaps and fluctuating demand cycles, and implement flexible risk management. This approach moves beyond simply delivering products to creating sustainable inclusion that drives growth well beyond the fields.
For example, Mongolia’s agricultural sector is central to both livelihoods and national growth. Khan Bank finances this sector with seasonal and investment loans, crop insurance and tailored products that meet the realities of herders and farmers.
Our reach—serving 2.9 million customers nationwide—ensures that even the most remote households are part of the country's economic story. Digital tools like mobile apps, SMS banking and digital wallets help users overcome geographic barriers, enabling even remote households to take part in the economy.
2. Build trust by designing financial systems around users.
According to the World Bank, about 1.4 billion adults globally were unbanked in 2021. Among the main reasons cited were lack of money, lack of documentation, lack of trust in financial institutions and distance to financial institutions.
Mongolia’s experience suggests that trust is the true currency of inclusion. AI-powered tools can reduce friction, but only if they speak your language. User-friendly interfaces are informed not by global UX trends, but by local user behavior: cash-heavy habits, seasonal incomes and intermittent connectivity.
In short, financial design is cultural design. And digital trust is earned when systems mirror the worldviews of those they serve.
3. Leverage green finance to drive sustainable growth.
Green financing is rapidly reshaping industries worldwide, offering businesses not just capital, but a competitive edge in a sustainable-driven market. Leaders looking to leverage it can start by aligning with global and national sustainability goals, as investors increasingly prioritize projects with measurable environmental and social impact.
For example, in 2024, Khan Bank broke new ground by securing financing from international sources, including green, social and gender-focused capital. These funds are now regenerating forests, powering homes with renewable energy and supporting women-led businesses across rural Mongolia.
By the end of the year, Khan Bank held over 52% of the country’s total green loan portfolio. Such initiatives reflect how green finance is not only transforming rural livelihoods but also advancing Mongolia’s broader national strategy for sustainable, inclusive growth.
Green finance isn’t just for environmental projects—it’s also a strategic tool for future-proofing businesses across sectors, from manufacturing to tech to agriculture. Those who move early position themselves not only as beneficiaries of change but as drivers of it.
4. Enable economic participation without forcing migration.
In Mongolia, “digital nomads” are not globe-trotting freelancers, but herders and farmers connected to solar-powered Wi-Fi. Mongolia’s solar-powered Wi-Fi and mobile payments allow herders to thrive economically without abandoning their way of life.
This illustrates how businesses can innovate in ways that respect culture while driving inclusion. Herders are using mobile payments for livestock sales. Teenagers in yurts are learning to code. Technology, in this sense, is not an escape. It is an anchor—a way for young Mongolians to stay rooted while still reaching outward. For banks, this presents a powerful opportunity to fuel economic participation without requiring urban migration or cultural loss.
Integrate measurable outcomes into your strategy. Governments and international partners increasingly prioritize projects that deliver tangible economic, social and environmental results. Demonstrate how your business contributes to job creation, productivity gains or carbon reduction to strengthen both your growth prospects and your license to operate.
When businesses align their ambitions with national progress, they stop being just market participants—they become growth partners. And in doing so, they can secure not only profitability but also relevance in a world where shared prosperity defines long-term success.
A Vision For The Future
Mongolia may be remote, but its experience offers global lessons:
• Design systems that work in low-connectivity, low-density areas.
• Let culture lead. Trust grows when technology adapts to users, not the other way around.
• Regenerate, don’t just grow. True leadership now demands more than profit—it demands stewardship of the land, the people and the generations to come.
In this era of transformation, the best banks will be those that ask not how fast they can grow, but how deeply they can serve.
A Legacy Beyond Ledgers
As Mongolia marks over 100 years of formal banking, a new story is unfolding—one that’s not measured in transactions alone, but resilience shared and futures shaped. For today’s banks, this means shifting focus from short-term returns to long-term resilience and financing industries that sustain communities, supporting inclusive economic growth, and designing technology that respects and uplifts its users. By asking harder questions—"Does our growth restore what matters?" "Does our innovation truly serve people?"—banks can build enduring trust.
Those who prioritize impact over image become institutions their societies rely on—not just for transactions, but for stability and generational progress. True progress isn’t measured by towering headquarters; it is seen in rural businesses flourishing, herders gaining access to credit, and digital tools reaching communities once beyond the financial system.
For global banking leaders, the long-term benefits of this approach are unmistakable: trust that endures through crises, loyalty that cannot be bought and a legacy that outlasts any product cycle. Leaders who embrace this mindset do more than command markets—they help shape a future in which finance becomes a force for shared prosperity.
By Munkhtuya Rentsenbat is the CEO of Khan Bank.
Published Date:2025-09-10