Uzbekistan new indd



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Uzbekistan f (1)

Economic outlook
With a population of 28 million, Uzbekistan is 
Central Asia’s largest market, offering transit routes to 
all countries in the region, as well as to Afghanistan. 
The country’s GDP has been growing consistently, 
averaging 8% annually over the past two decades. In 
2012, Uzbekistan’s estimated GDP sat at $51.17 bil-
lion, or $3,600 per capita.
3
 The growth, however, has 
been generated primarily by rising prices for gas, oil, 
cotton and gold. Wealth is spread unequally, with a 
small group of well-connected elites controlling the 
bulk of the economy. Most of Uzbekistan’s popula-
tion lives in rural areas, and Tashkent has blocked ur-
banization by requiring restrictive residence permits 
and registrations. Uzbek citizens are not allowed to 
travel to some border areas, and those living outside 
Tashkent need a special government permit to go to 
the capital. Over 2.5 million Uzbek citizens work in 
Russia and Kazakhstan on a seasonal basis, sending 
remittances back to Uzbekistan.
4
 The president rou-
tinely announces ambitious development programs, 
however these have never led to greater prosperity 
for the majority of Uzbeks.
5
Uzbekistan’s Central Bank maintains strict cur-
rency controls, deeming it illegal for Uzbeks to pos-
sess US currency. But because of a large gap between 
official and black market exchange rates, most people 
prefer US currency. In 2003 Uzbekistan implemented 
Article 8 of the International Monetary Fund Treaty 
that enforces domestic currency convertibility, but 
since then has broken the regulation several times. 
1 Expert on security issues in Central Asia, with a focus on military, national, and regional defense, as well as state-crime relations in Eurasia; 
Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.
2 For more on the rent-seeking behavior of political elites, see M. Laruelle and S. Peyrouse, Globalizing Central Asia: Geopolitics and the Challenges 
of Economic Development (Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 2013), 203, 140-41; L. P. Markowitz, State Erosion: Unlootable Resources and Unruly Elites in 
Central Asia (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2013), 104-11.
3 “The World Factbook: Uzbekistan,” CIA, https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/uz.html.
4 D. Trilling, “Uzbekistan’s President Attacks ‘Lazy’ Labor Migrants,” Eurasianet.org, June 21, 2013, http://www.eurasianet.org/node/67157.
5 “Uzbekistan - Rotten to the Core, but Number One in Some Important Categories,” Uznews.net, February 18, 2012, http://www.uznews.net/ 
news_single.php?lng=en&cid=31&nid=19128.


Erica Marat
84
All foreign investors are required to open accounts 
in local currency in addition to contributing hard 
currency investments. Furthermore, all businesses 
must convert half of their hard currency earnings 
into local currency.
6
 The government monitors any 
transaction exceeding $100,000 in order to prevent 
money laundering, however the reality of this means 
that only transactions for lower sums are monitored, 
while elites with political connections are able to 
make large foreign transactions without Central 
Bank oversight.
The government attempts to promote local pro-
ducers ahead of imported goods. Uzbekistan has 
double taxation avoidance agreements with a num-
ber of its international trading partners, but refuses 
to join regional or international trade organizations. 
Indeed, Uzbekistan’s exports have always exceeded its 
imports. In 2011, for instance, exports were valued 
at $15 billion compared to $10.5 billion for imports.
7
 
Most export items are not taxed in Uzbekistan, but 
there are levies of up to 30% on imports. There is also 
a 20% VAT in local currency.
8
 Uzbekistan survived 
the negative effects of the global economic downturn 
in 2008-9 mostly thanks to its closed economy.
Transparency International ranks Uzbekistan 
168 in a list of 177 countries, indicating that it is one 
of the most corrupt regimes in the world. Likewise, 
on the World Bank’s ease of doing business scale, 
Uzbekistan is rated number 146 out of 189 coun-
tries. It scores the lowest in terms of “trading across 
borders,” “getting credit,” and “paying taxes.” Finally, 
Uzbekistan is considered among the “worst of the 
worst” countries for civil liberties and political rights, 
according to Freedom House’s democracy rating.

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