FEDERATION OF EURO-ASIAN STOCK EXCHANGES
ANNUAL REPORT APRIL 2011
“TOSHKENT” REPUBLICAN STOCK EXCHANGE
ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL DEVELOPMENTS
Economic and Political Environment
Despite the global recession and economic
contraction among its major trading partners,
Uzbekistan continued its strong economic
performance in 2009 with GDP growth of 8.1%.
The economy was affected by the recession
through weaker external demand and lower
remittance inflows.
The government responded to the recession
early with a large-scale anticrisis program for
2009–2012, which was adopted at end-2008.
Measures included substantial public
infrastructure investment, tax preferences to
exporting industries and small and medium-
sized enterprises, increases in public sector
wages, and recapitalization of commercial
banks. The program was financed through the
government budget, state-owned enterprises
(SOEs), and the Fund for Reconstruction and
Development (FRD), a sovereign wealth
management fund established in 2006.
Healthy budget revenues and good export
performance of gold and natural gas
supported the program’s implementation. As a
result, GDP growth was sustained by output
gains in industry, including construction
(11.2%) and services (14.0%). Nonconstruction
industrial growth is attributable to increased
production of hydrocarbons, machinery, and
chemicals, which together accounted for 42%
of total industrial production. These three
subsectors combined posted growth of 13.1%.
The performance of other industrial subsectors
was more modest, with the output of
nonferrous metallurgy (mainly gold, silver, and
copper) growing by 2.6%.
Within industry, construction shot up by 33.1%.
This gain was driven primarily by an increase
in fixed capital investment. According to official
data, such investment rose by 24.8% in 2009.
Construction output was lifted by public
infrastructure development projects in rural
areas. Notable sources of construction
demand were large SOEs under government-
led sector modernization and renovation
programs (primarily manufacturing and
mining). The share of fixed capital investment
in GDP increased from 23.0% in 2008 to an
estimated 26.1% in 2009. Rapidly growing
telecommunications and financial markets
were one of the major contributors to growth in
services: mobile subscriber numbers have
increased 10-fold in less than 4 years. The
financial services market is growing fast in
areas of microfinancing and bank debit card
processing. In response to rising demand for
credit from microenterprises, especially in rural
areas, the volume of microfinance lending
reached $200 million in 2009.
The government reported that foreign direct
investment in 2009 increased by 80% from
2008. The bulk of the increase came from
expansion of activities in the hydrocarbons
and communications sectors. In December
2008, the government established the first free
industrialeconomic zone in the Navoi region
(FIEZ Navoi), which provides tax and customs
preferential facilities for foreign investors. By
end-2009, the government had signed 37
investment agreements with various foreign
investors for FIEZ Navoi amounting to more
than $500 million. The first investment outlays
are expected this year.
The latest estimate of the year-average
consumer price index by the International
Monetary Fund is 12.5%. Broad money growth
is estimated at 34.0% in 2009. The
depreciation of the local currency supported
exports. Sharp falls in the Kazakhstan tenge
and Russian ruble against their respective
major trade partners added downward
pressure on the nominal exchange rate. The
main elements of the anticrisis program
implemented through fiscal policy were
recapitalization of commercial banks to
support lending; increased public
infrastructure development to support job
creation; and tax exemptions to support
exporting industries and small and
mediumsized enterprises. The government
also increased public sector wages by 40% on
average in 2009. These expenditures were
offset by strong revenue receipts stemming
from high export prices (especially for gold
and gas) and tax reforms. The general
government budget is estimated to have
posted a surplus of 0.2% of GDP in 2009.
Including the FRD, the consolidated budget
surplus is estimated at 4.4% of GDP
The crisis had impacts on exports and
remittances. Exports to Uzbekistan’s main
markets, namely Kazakhstan, the Russian
Federation, and Ukraine, and remittances from
Kazakhstan and the Russian Federation, were
heavily affected. Nonhydrocarbon exports
contracted by 11% in 2009. Machinery (with a
61% decrease to $341 million) and cotton (a
6% drop to $1.0 billion) were among the worst
hit, but their lower export revenues were offset
by strong global demand for gold and income
from natural gas sales to the Russian
Federation (the largest customer).
Hydrocarbon exports increased by 41% to
$4.0 billion. With the gold and gas prices
hitting records, export revenue increased by
about 2.0% relative to 2008. The growth of
imports is estimated at 25.8% in 2009. As in
past years, machinery and equipment were the
largest import items, reflecting infrastructure
development. The sharp fall in export growth,
increased imports, and lower remittances cut
the current account surplus to an estimated
12.0% of GDP at end-2009, down from 16.7%
in 2008
In the framework of its anticrisis program for
2009–2012, the government will continue its
infrastructure development initiatives as well as
sector modernization programs. This implies
significant investment commitments, most of
which will be financed by domestic banks, the
FRD, and SOEs. Domestic investments by
SOEs will be geared toward the hydrocarbon,
energy, chemical, and transport sectors.
Foreign direct investment will also provide
important financing for investment. The
government’s investment program envisages a
$2.4 billion inflow of foreign direct investment
in 2010, out of which $2.0 billion will be
directed to hydrocarbons. In April 2009, the
national oil and gas company, Uzbekneftegaz,
established a $2.5 billion international joint
venture to produce gas-to-liquid synthetic fuel.
Due to the active industrial policy, foreign
investments are expected to increase steadily
in the near future. At FIEZ Navoi, 16 investment
projects for a total amount of $200 million are
forecast to start in 2010. A major part of the
foreign investment is expected to be from Asia
and the Middle East. The government plans to
attract about $1.0 billion of investment into
FIEZ Navoi in the medium term. It has
supported the private sector through
reductions in rates of unified and fixed taxes,
as well as value-added tax refunds and soft
loans through commercial banks for exporters.
Key Information Contacts
State Property Committee www.spc.gov.uz
Ministry of Finance www.mf.uz/eng
National Bank of Uzbekistan http://eng.nbu.com/about/history/index.php
State Central Securities Depository www.deponet.uz/english.shtml
Portal of the State Authority www.gov.uz/en
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