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DEVELOPMENT FINANCE ASSESSMENT FOR THE REPUBLIC OF UZBEKISTAN
The newly established agency of the Business Ombudsman is a practical improvement to
protect entrepreneur rights.
Increasingly, the multinational companies operating in Uzbekistan have launched several
society-centred programmes as a part of their CSR activities. For example, the American
Chamber of Commerce (Amcham) in Uzbekistan has established a separate CSR Committee,
with whom the GoU could collaborate to strengthen CSR policies and consider the role of
MNEs to contribute a durable and resilient recovery of COVID-19
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. For example,
setting
up a COVID-19 Solidarity Support Fund to be financed by international businesses and
philanthropists.
FINANCIAL SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
The financial sector in Uzbekistan is mainly represented by banking structures. The
insurance market, leasing market, and the stock market are poorly developed and often the
players in these markets are directly or indirectly connected with banks (they are subsidiaries
of banks). Banking penetration is medium with 41 percent of the population having access
to an account. Much of penetration is in the form of salary accounts which are accessible
through ‘online’ cards. The government and the central bank are pursuing a policy of reducing
the cash in the system by encouraging the payment of salaries
into accounts and cashless
payments for utilities, taxes, mobile recharge, and other services.
The Tashkent Stock Exchange is currently dominated by state-owned banks, which are
legally mandated to list shares. These shares account for 86 percent of the trading stocks
on the exchange, limiting liquidity and the appeal of the exchange for foreign investors,
who hold just two percent of the shares. Its market capitalization is a mere 5.3
percent of
GDP, compared to 21.7 percent in neighboring Kazakhstan and 54.2 percent in Vietnam. In
January 2019, authorities created the Capital Markets Development Agency (CMDA) with the
aim to triple the market capitalization from the current level of USD 5 billion to USD 15 billion
by 2025. The CMDA’s development strategy envisions a new wave of initial and secondary
public offerings related to the government’s broader privatization drive
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The agency is also
seeking to encourage the development of local retail investing and pension funds to enable
Uzbekistan’s working and middle classes to participate in the expansion of the stock market.
Improving Uzbekistan’s capital markets are crucial to financing the ongoing campaign
of economic reforms. Presently, Uzbek companies are entirely dependent on bank loans
to finance new investment, making it difficult for major enterprises to raise the significant
funds necessary for much-needed upgrades to fixed capital. Revitalizing the stock exchange
may support the country’s largest enterprises to issue securities to meet the financing
requirements of their own transformation plans.
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