15
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT CONTEXT
develop differentiated COVID response and recovery measures according to citizens’ needs.
The survey could be conducted monthly to monitor the socio-economic impact of COVID
and response measures on households’ livelihoods
6
.
Between 2000 and 2018, Uzbekistan’s HDI value increased by 19.2 percent from 0.596
to 0.710, placing it in the ‘high human development category’
7
. However, this HDI score
remains below the average of 0.750 for countries in the high human development group and
below the average of 0.779 for countries in Europe and Central Asia.
Unemployment is on the rise and the growth rate of formal employment has been
decreasing in recent years (Figure 2). The dependency ratio is projected to peak in 2022 at
51.15, up from 47.96 in 2014. According to the Ministry of Labor, only 5.7 million people are
employed in the formal sector out of 19 million in the labor force
8
.
The country’s substantial informal sector is leaving a large amount of people vulnerable
to the slowdown. The ongoing restructuration of the SOEs increases the labor supply which,
in combination with returning migrants due to the COVID-19 crisis, may further exacerbate
difficulties to create sufficient jobs (IMF, 2019). This bourgeoning working-age population
and the significant informal sector calls for a more job-rich and inclusive COVID-19 recovery
9
.
Accelerating formal job creation would in turn generate additional revenue for the National
State Budget.
Deficiencies in provision of material and technical base in the education system result
in a poorly trained labor force and uneven territorial distribution of demand for various
professions
10
. There is shortage of specialists in individual regions of Uzbekistan, especially
doctors and teachers, as well as skilled blue-collar workers, which causes graduates to seek
6
To provide the government with timely evidence to guide the policy response, a new high-frequency survey – the
Nigeria COVID-19 National Longitudinal Phone Survey (COVID-19 NLPS) – has been initiated in Nigeria. This survey
is being implemented by the National Bureau of Statistics with technical support from the World Bank and is designed
to measure and monitor the economic and social impacts of the COVID-19 crisis by tracking households’ welfare and
behavior every month over a period of 12 months.
7
2019 UNDP Human Development Report.
8
Official unemployment in 2019 was 9.0 percent.
9
About 200,000 to 250,000 people enter the labor market every year (GoU, 2020).
10
Threats identified by the GoU’s draft Concept 2030.
Figure 2 Labour Market Structure and Demographic Trends in Uzbekistan
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