A Partnership for the Next 50 Years, Mongolia and UNDP Together www.undp.org
Joint Op-Ed by the Chair of the Parliament of Mongolia, H.E. Byambatsogt Sandag and the UNDP Resident Representative in Mongolia, Matilda Dimovska.
As Mongolia marks 50 years of partnership with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), this is more than a commemoration of history. It is a moment of confidence and clarity, and a reminder that when the the value of multilateralism is questioned, Mongolia’s experience offers a compelling answer.
At a time when global cooperation is both challenged and urgently needed, Mongolia stands as a clear example of how multilateralism works in practice. Development here has not been shaped in isolation. It has been built through partnership, anchored in shared values, national ownership, and mutual trust.
Since 1976, Mongolia and UNDP have worked together across a wide range of priorities, from supporting nomadic livelihoods and environmental protection to strengthening public institutions, expanding employment and household incomes, improving people’s livelihoods, addressing climate change, and advancing digital transformation.
Over five decades, this partnership has turned trust into action, and shared ambition into lasting progress. This anniversary is not only an opportunity to look back. It is a moment to define a more ambitious next chapter for Mongolia–UNDP cooperation.
In an era of geopolitical tension, climate change, development inequalities, and economic uncertainty, the Mongolia–UNDP partnership offers an important lesson: multilateralism delivers when it is practical, nationally led, and focused on results that improve people’s lives.
Fifty Years of Partnership: Building the Foundations of Progress
Mongolia’s development has been shaped by the efforts, aspirations, and values of its people, by cooperation between the state and citizens, and by international partnerships built on mutual trust. UNDP has stood alongside Mongolia during some of the most defining stages of its development journey. Together, we have supported the transition to a market economy and democratic society, helped strengthen modern governance systems, and contributed to the institutions that continue to underpin the country’s long-term development.
This partnership has gone far beyond projects. From strengthening the parliamentary system and advancing landmark legislation to supporting key institutions in disaster management, anti-corruption, and human rights, these contributions have helped form the backbone of Mongolia’s progress. UNDP has also supported the policies that matter for the future, including development planning, decentralization, sustainable natural resource management, and climate action.
Yet the most enduring contribution lies in what is less visible: stronger institutions, more inclusive policymaking, and deeper environmental stewardship. These are the foundations that make development sustainable. They show that development cooperation is not a short-term transaction, but a long-term partnership grounded in trust, knowledge, and shared purpose.
From Progress to Leadership: Mongolia’s role in a changing world
Today, Mongolia has reached a new milestone as an upper-middle-income country. This is not only an economic marker, but a testament to decades of resilience, reform, and ambition.
But this milestone is not an endpoint. It marks the beginning of a new role.
Mongolia is no longer only a beneficiary of global development cooperation. It is increasingly a contributor, a partner, and a source of solutions. From advancing gender equality and democratic governance to contributing to peacekeeping and championing the priorities of landlocked developing countries, Mongolia is stepping forward with confidence on the global stage.
In a world searching for credible pathways to inclusive and sustainable development, Mongolia’s experience matters.
A Partnership Evolving with Ambition
As Mongolia advances, so too must its partnership with UNDP.
The traditional model, centered largely on grant assistance, is no longer sufficient to meet the country’s increasingly sophisticated ambitions. Mongolia’s Vision 2050 and national development priorities call for a different kind of partnership: one that is strategic, knowledge-driven, and nationally owned.
A new phase of partnership is emerging, bringing together strategic national leadership and investment, and global expertise to accelerate development outcomes. It places greater emphasis on policy innovation, institutional capacity, and co-financing arrangements that can scale solutions in areas such as climate action, public services, health, and gender equality.
Increasingly, this partnership is becoming co-financed and co-created. Government institutions are investing directly in joint initiatives, while UNDP helps mobilize additional resources, expertise, and innovation from across the world. This shift is more sustainable and more empowering, reinforcing national ownership and ensuring that solutions are tailored to Mongolia’s context.
Looking Ahead: Shaping the Future Together
The challenges ahead are significant. Climate change is intensifying pressures on ecosystems and livelihoods. Economic diversification remains an urgent priority. Ensuring that growth is inclusive, especially for youth, women, and vulnerable communities, is essential.
At the same time, Mongolia’s strengths are equally compelling: a young and dynamic population, resilient democratic institutions, vast natural resources, and growing potential in renewable energy and digital transformation.
The next chapter of Mongolia–UNDP cooperation must match this moment.
It must support a just and green transition that protects both livelihoods and ecosystems. It must enable future-ready governance systems capable of navigating complexity and uncertainty. It must unlock new opportunities through digital innovation, sustainable finance, and cross-sector partnerships.
A Partnership for Generations
Fifty years ago, Mongolia and UNDP came together with a shared vision: to improve people’s lives and build a more prosperous, inclusive, and resilient society.
Today, that vision endures, but the ambition has grown.
This is a partnership that has evolved from support to systems, from projects to policies, from assistance to co-creation. In a world of rising uncertainty, Mongolia’s experience reminds us what is possible when cooperation is built on trust and purpose.
The next 50 years will demand bold choices, innovation, and collective action.
Together, Mongolia and UNDP are ready not only to meet that challenge, but to lead.
Published Date:2026-06-30





