Mongolia's 86% of online orders are completed on Chinese platforms

This is just the beginning

On September 2nd, the President of Mongolia, Ukhnaa Khurelsukh, came to Beijing and signed a stack of agreements on customs, power, media, etc., in one go.

No small talk at the scene, directly stamping.

China has built nine power transmission channels for Mongolia, delivering 1.5 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity per year, enough to light and cook for hundreds of thousands of families.

Mongolian beef, mutton, and cashmere scarves are sold globally through Chinese e-commerce, accounting for more than 80%.

The channel for resource monetization is fully handled by China.

Mongolia lacks roads, networks, and markets, while China lacks resources and depth.

One provides money and effort, the other provides minerals and grasslands; both are playing their cards skillfully.

Khurelsukh's statement "firmly standing by China's side" upgraded the neighbor to a partner.

Geographically, Mongolia is sandwiched between Russia and China, and it follows whoever is stable.

By laying down the power grid, logistics, and digital platforms, China effectively integrates Mongolia into its own cycle.

Once the model works, Central Asia will pay more attention.

A neighbor is not a distant relative, but a classmate. Whoever reaches out first gets the benefit first.

Original: www.toutiao.com/article/1842268449964298/

Statement: This article represents the views of the author.