Uzbekistan’s Transformation: Strategies and Perspectives


Download 0.88 Mb.
Pdf ko'rish
bet8/38
Sana21.01.2023
Hajmi0.88 Mb.
#1106547
1   ...   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   ...   38
Bog'liq
2020RP12 Uzbekistan

Uzbekistan under Karimov 
Karimov’s Uzbekistan was a state with remarkable 
internal stability and a high degree of economic 
autarchy, and was regarded as one of the world’s 
most repressive.
15
Unlike neighbours such as Kazakh-
stan, Uzbekistan shunned economic liberalisation 
following the collapse of the Soviet Union and pre-
served core characteristics of the centrally planned 
economy. Small businesses and retail were rapidly 
privatised but the strategic sectors – agriculture, 
14 For details: Andrew F. March, “The Use and Abuse of 
History: ‘National Ideology’ as Transcendental Object in Islam 
Karimov’s ‘Ideology of National Independence’”, Central Asian 
Survey 21, no. 4 (2002): 371–84 (374 ff.). 
15 The latest Freedom House reports still categorise Uzbeki-
stan as “consolidated authoritarian”; see Freedom in the World 
2018: Uzbekistan, https://www.refworld.org/docid/5b2cb8386. 
html und Freedom in the World 2019: Uzbekistan, https://www. 
justice.gov/eoir/page/file/1151971/download (both accessed 
30 June 2020). 
fossil fuels, energy, transport and services, and the 
enterprises involved in them – remained subject to 
state planning and control, as did foreign trade and 
banking.
16
This initial decision was indicated by the economic 
structure inherited from the Soviet era, in which three 
factors were of fundamental importance: firstly the 
country’s constellation of resources and specialisation 
in agriculture, especially cotton-growing (which had 
accounted for more than 60 percent of the Soviet 
Union’s production). Another significant resource is 
gold, of which Uzbekistan possesses the world’s sixth-
largest reserves. With cotton and gold, secondly, 
Uzbekistan possesses resources that are easy to export 
and generate large revenues. And thirdly, light indus-
try orientated largely on the needs of agriculture 
allowed domestic production of basic consumer goods 
that had hitherto been imported. Local production of 
wheat (which accounted for about 40 percent of im-
ports in 1989) and oil products was also stepped up. 
Achieving self-sufficiency in strategic economic 
sectors and avoiding social unrest were also the prin-
cipal objectives of state economic policy. Both miti-
gated against radical reforms that could have risked 
social unrest – especially in view of the low standard 
of living of the rural population, which made up 40 
percent of the total in 1989.
17
A fundamental eco-
nomic reorientation would also have endangered the 
established system of political relationships, which 
was based on the state-controlled production of cash 
crops (cotton and later cereals) and the division of the 
resulting revenues (rents) between the involved stra-
tegic groups.
18
The central apparatus, the associated 
bureaucracies, and the regional agriculture-based 
elites enjoyed de facto control over access to the cen-
tral production factors (land, labour, capital) and all 
had multiple possibilities to skim rents for particular 
ends and to build their own influence networks.
19
Implementing the state development objectives thus 
depended on ensuring the flow of resource revenues 
16 Kobil Ruziev, Dipak Ghosh and Sheila C. Dow, “The Uz-
bek Puzzle Revisited: An Analysis of Economic Performance 
in Uzbekistan since 1991”, Central Asia Survey 26, no. 1 (2007): 
7–30 (12). 

Download 0.88 Mb.

Do'stlaringiz bilan baham:
1   ...   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   ...   38




Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling