Tag: salary-gap-mongolia

  • Hiring in Mongolia Is Broken. Here’s What’s Actually Causing It.

    Hiring in Mongolia Is Broken. Here’s What’s Actually Causing It.

    Low unemployment and a growing economy, yet companies cannot fill their most critical roles. The problem runs deeper than most employers want to admit.

    Mongolia’s economy has grown considerably over the past decade, largely driven by its mining sector and the steady expansion of financial and professional services in Ulaanbaatar. Unemployment sits near historic lows. The number of formally registered companies has risen steadily. And yet, if you talk to hiring managers across industries, the
    picture they describe doesn’t feel like a tight labor market. It feels like a broken one.

    Senior roles sit open for six to twelve months. Qualified candidates apply and hear nothing back. Salary expectations between employers and candidates differ so widely that negotiations often collapse before they begin. And a disproportionate share of hiring decisions are made not through formal processes, but through personal networks quietly.

    Ask anyone who has hired or been hired in Mongolia’s professional market, and they will describe some version of this. What most conversations skip is why it works this way and what it would take to change.

    The network works. Until it doesn’t.

    Mongolia’s professional class in Ulaanbaatar is small enough that most hiring managers already know who they’re looking for before a search begins. In that context, relationship based hiring isn’t simply a habit, it’s an information strategy. A referral arrives pre-vetted, with the recommender’s reputation on the line if the hire goes wrong. In a market without reliable salary data or standardized credentials, a referral carries more signal than a resume.

    The cost is who gets excluded. Graduates from regional universities, returning professionals, and candidates who simply haven’t had time to build the right connections get filtered out before anyone reviews their qualifications. The market doesn’t exclude them because they’re unqualified. It excludes them because they’re unfamiliar, and in a
    relationship-driven system, the two get treated the same way. Companies fishing the same small pool compete over the same people, bid salaries up reactively, and convince themselves the market is the problem. It feels tight partly because they’ve made it tight.

    The network works. It just works better for some people than others. In a market this small, that is not a minor inefficiency. It is the defining feature.

    The formal process nobody believes in

    Most mid-size and large Mongolian companies post jobs formally. But the process rarely works the way it’s supposed to, and both sides have learned to expect little from it.

    From the employer side, too many applications, too little relevance, and a hiring process where effort rarely matches outcome. Many HR managers admit they post roles publicly out of procedure or policy, while already knowing who they intend to hire.

    From the candidate side, the experience is just as discouraging. Applications go unanswered. Interviews run multiple rounds and then go silent. Roles turn out to have been filled through referral weeks before the listing went live. For candidates who haven’t been through this before, it’s confusing. For those who have, it becomes a reason to stop trying altogether.

    Both sides are responding rationally to an unreliable system. And both responses make it more unreliable. When employers don’t invest in the formal process, it produces poor results. When candidates lose confidence in it, application quality drops. The cycle is self reinforcing, and it won’t break until someone decides to go first.

    Nobody knows what anything pays

    Mongolia has no standardized public compensation data for most professional roles. Salary decisions come down to internal precedent, peer comparisons, or whatever a candidate names in the room. Similar roles pay very differently across companies, with no logical relationship to seniority or scope. Candidates with insider access negotiate far better
    outcomes than equally qualified peers who don’t, not because they’re more valuable, but because they have information others lack.

    Above all of this sits the mining sector premium. For instance, Oyu Tolgoi, Erdenet, and Erdenes Tavan Tolgoi pay at levels most non-resource companies structurally cannot match, not because those companies are poorly managed, but because resource extraction
    generates margins that banking, technology, and professional services don’t.

    A senior operations or engineering professional in the resource sector earns substantially more than an equivalent role anywhere else in Ulaanbaatar. Companies outside the resource orbit are outbid before negotiations even begin. Most of them know it, and most haven’t found a
    meaningful answer to it.

    Professionals who discover they were underpaid don’t accept it quietly. They leave and in a small market, that story travels.

    The professionals who leave, and why

    Mongolia’s labor emigration is more skilled than public conversation acknowledges. South Korea’s Employment Permit System draws Mongolian workers in significant numbers each year, and the cohort increasingly includes people with technical qualifications and university degrees, not only those seeking unskilled work. Japan and Germany have formalized bilateral agreements opening structured pathways for Mongolian professionals in engineering, healthcare, and logistics.

    The economics are straightforward. Foreign wages are multiples of comparable domestic roles. Career progression is more clearly structured. Remittances have become a meaningful contributor to Mongolian household income nationally, which looks positive on paper, but signals something uncomfortable. For a growing share of Mongolia’s most capable workers, staying home is the financially irrational choice. The country isn’t losing its least productive people to emigration. It is losing some of its most capable, precisely because they have the qualifications and adaptability to go.

    What the better companies are doing

    A minority of Mongolian organizations navigate this environment noticeably better than their peers, and they are not all paying the most. They hire earlier, building relationships with universities, including regional ones outside Ulaanbaatar, and bring in graduates through structured development programs. The result is professionals who stay because they were developed by the organization, not simply bought from a competitor.

    They also make their processes legible, clear timelines, consistent communication, and honest feedback. In a market where most hiring experiences are frustrating, this alone builds a reputation that attracts stronger candidates. And the most effective organizations treat talent as a leadership issue, not an HR function, because how executives talk about growth and promotion determines whether ambitious people see a future there at all.

    The honest conclusion

    Some of Mongolia’s hiring dysfunction is structural, including the mining premium, the absence of compensation data, and years of underinvestment in workforce development. No single employer fixes those alone.

    But a significant share is self-inflicted. Employers who hire only through networks, run processes they don’t believe in, and treat development as a cost are sustaining the very shortage they complain about most.

    The companies best positioned five years from now are building their talent pipeline today. The market is fixable. It just requires employers to stop waiting for someone else to fix it first.

  • Why Mongolian Youth are Retreating from the “Salary War”

    Why Mongolian Youth are Retreating from the “Salary War”

    From Survival to Self-Expression 

    The job market in Mongolia is witnessing rapid changes in generational attitudes toward work. For the earlier generations, a job was a tool, a necessary mean to support a family and earn a living. For GenZ and Millennials, work is a critical part of their lifestyle, an expression of their value systems and an important mode of self-expression. 

    Modern Mongolian professionals quit unhealthy work environments with the same zeal they quit toxic personal relationships. It is the death of the era when employers could attract talents just by paying more. That is why The new era has set in which calls for commitment to shared values, commitment to company culture, and commitment to psychological safety. 

    “Red Flags” and the Cultural Filter 

    Today’s job seekers no longer passively attend interviews, merely marketing their skillsets. On the other hand, they examine companies to ensure that they fit their personal code of ethics. 

    Management styles, the demand for unpaid overtime, and conflict within teams are now major red flags deal breakers for top talent. They know that they can only bring out their best if given a supportive environment based on trust rather than micromanagement. It is not enough for organizations to have a boss, but they must communicate a healthy working culture. Companies that view employees purely as resources will experience massive talent shortages in the future. 

    The Power of Candidate Experience 

    The era of making blind decisions based entirely on salary is over. Candidate experience is the emotional experience a candidate feels and the quality of interaction they get throughout the process. 

    Modern youth are asking important questions: Does this company really value mental health? Do they invest in employee lifelong learning and growth? Most importantly, do they provide work-life balance? In the current Mongolian context, office comfort has changed. It now includes trust-based autonomy, flexi-hours, and policies that ensure employees’ well-being ahead of perks such as sofas or free coffee. 

    Digital Transformation and the Era of the “Transparent” Company 

    The information that previous generations needed to locate employment in newspapers is now acquired by contemporary talent with a single click, via LinkedIn, Zangia, and Lambda.Global. Digitization has made companies more transparent. 

    According to the Digital 2024: Mongolia report, internet access has reached 82% of the population, with LinkedIn users exceeding 540,000. This represents a transformation in the recruiting landscape. Data indicates that over 90% of candidates do preliminary job searches online and evaluate a company’s cultural standards via social media. They make investigations through the Facebook and Instagram pages to check the environment before applying for a job. If a company appears outdated or locked down on social media, it immediately raises such red flags and discourages talent from applying. 

    Matching the Pace of “Trends” 

    Recruitment in today’s world is not just an HR task but is an amalgam of watching the latest trends, building the desired culture and marketing. Attracting top talent means a company’s values must also strike the new generation, who prize sustainability, equity, and innovation above all else. 

    Researches reveal that only 35-45% of all employees in Mongolia feel assured and satisfied with their current jobs (ibid). The rest is disengaged and ready to leave, finding better workplace fulfillment in competing firms, encouraged by poor leadership or lack of employee growth opportunities. Being out of style today means more than just failing to keep up with technology, it means failing to understand mindset. To stay competitive you must turn your workplace from a cubicle prison into a creative hub in which talent can thrive. 

    Becoming the Pioneers of a New Era 

    Winning in the Mongolian talent market is for those that understand the needs of humans along with being able to keep track of current trends. This is not just the battle of salaries anymore, this is the battle for meaning, purpose and culture. The Mongolian youth are not looking for jobs. They want a home, not just a house, a place with enough stimuli for development, respect, and mental peace. 

    Companies that recognize this demand and take action will secure the future of Mongolia’s talent pool. Recruitment in the new era is about creating an environment to enable people reach their highest potentials. 

    1. Digital 2024: Mongolia – DataReportal Report 

    2. LinkedIn Global Talent Trends – Workplace Insights 

    3. National Statistics Office of Mongolia – 1212.mn