South Caucasus and Central Asia - The Belt and Road Initiative : Uzbekistan Country Case Study
Uzbekistan is a resource-rich country with a relatively young population of 33 million, the largest in Central Asia. It is also a geographic pivot for the region, bordering all other Central Asian countries and Afghanistan, with transit connections...
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Format: | Report |
Language: | English |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2020
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/688501593501612264/South-Caucasus-and-Central-Asia-The-Belt-and-Road-Initiative-Uzbekistan-Country-Case-Study http://hdl.handle.net/10986/34121 |
Summary: | Uzbekistan is a resource-rich country
with a relatively young population of 33 million, the
largest in Central Asia. It is also a geographic pivot for
the region, bordering all other Central Asian countries and
Afghanistan, with transit connections in all directions. As
a double landlocked country, it is uniquely dependent on
these cross-border transport connections and on how well
they work. It can also potentially be the largest market in
Central Asia and given its sizeable young labor force and
substantial agricultural and manufacturing capacity, a major
regional exporter. This note attempts to highlight the
potential economic impact of BRI on the Tajik economy. It
looks at how, if fully implemented globally, the BRI is
expected to achieve better transport connections and greater
economic integration of participating BRI countries,
discusses improvements in Tajikistan’s cross-border
transport, electricity and ICT infrastructure to-date, and
assesses the potential impact of the completion of all BRI
transport projects on Tajik shipment time. It further looks
at the likely economic impact of BRI reductions in shipment
time on exports, FDI and GDP, and the spatial distribution
of benefits within the country and at how complementary
polices can enhance the positive impact and mitigate risks.
Finally, it examines the fiscal risk of Tajikistan’s
scaling-up of investment in BRI transport projects in the
coming years without undermining medium-term debt sustainability. |
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