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DEVELOPMENT FINANCE ASSESSMENT FOR THE REPUBLIC OF UZBEKISTAN
central government. Resources are transferred to the local governments while allowing them
little autonomy or discretion in decision making, thus limiting ownership and accountability.
The GoU’s intention to increase efficiency and accountability of public service delivery
through introducing PBB may be limited by its tendency to maintain strong, central oversight.
Public managers should be held accountable for the achievement of stated objectives and
not for the mix of resources used for attaining those objectives. Strengthening accountability
of public spending would therefore require an overhaul of public management style practiced
so far, including enhancing of managers’ authority, flexibility and budgetary discretion and
providing adequate incentives for them to adopt this new management style. Consequently,
measures to further strengthen central input controls may conflict
with the objective to
increase performance of spending agencies (UNDP, 2016).
To strengthen civil society contribution to the State planning process, the created the
Strategy Development Center. This GONGO involve the work of several local organizations,
including the Independent Civil Society Monitoring Institute, the Legislation Monitoring
Institute, the Chamber of Commerce and Industry, the Chamber of Advocates,
the Academy
of Public Administration, the National Association of Electronic Media, and the National
Association of NGOs. The Center is intended to consolidate efforts of these institutes to
facilitate expert and public discussions on reforms outlined in the five-year development
strategy. Public review of the legislation can be implemented through a dedicated website.
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KEY FINDINGS
KEY FINDINGS
This DFA reveals that available development finance falls
short of financing needs to
achieve the SDGs. The onset of the COVID-19 crisis risks further widening this financing gap
and undoing SDG progress. Avoiding this requires concerted action to scale up ongoing
efforts to build the enabling environment (legal, political, regulatory, etc.) and the supporting
ecosystems (institutions and actors) for increasing the impact of the different forms of
financial resources towards achieving the SDGs in Uzbekistan.
This first assessment of Uzbekistan’s development finance context identifies the scale of
the challenge ahead. Its key findings are summarized according to the four building blocks
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of an INFF (Table 5).
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