Cyprus Today

‘Reforms must continue after liberalisa­tion of currency’

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AFTER liberalisi­ng its foreign exchange system, Uzbekistan now needs to restructur­e its entire economy distorted by the decades of strict currency and price controls, officials from the World Bank and Internatio­nal Monetary Fund said.

This would involve painful steps such as raising energy prices or shutting down companies unable to adapt to the changing environmen­t, and at the same time taming inflation and improving the business climate.

Hans Timmer, chief economist for Europe and Central Asia at the World Bank urged the government to keep up the pace of reform but acknowledg­ed Tashkent was worried about the effect on jobs.

Juha Kahkonen, deputy director of the Middle East and Central Asia department at the IMF, stressed in a separate interview the need for tighter budget and monetary policies to help curb inflation.

Both officials were speaking on visits to the Kazakh capital of Astana.

Central Asia’s most populous nation of 32 million resumed longdelaye­d market reforms after President Shavkat Mirziyoyev came to power in 2016 following the death of veteran leader Islam Karimov.

Last year the former Soviet republic ended a system under which a select few companies enjoyed access to foreign currency at half the market price, creating economic distortion­s.

The foreign exchange reform, in which the Uzbek sum was devalued to 8,100 per dollar from 4,210, has unshackled many companies. But some are struggling, such as sugar refineries which used to import feedstock from as far away as Brazil. The cost of their raw sugar inputs has effectivel­y doubled while the retail price of sugar remains fixed because of its importance to households.

Instead, the government has stepped up imports of refined sugar, making Uzbekistan the biggest buyer of Ukrainian sugar this year.

“There are winners and there are losers.” Mr Timmer said, referring to the sugar industry’s problems. “Apart from reducing preferenti­al treatment of certain sectors and companies, it is important to take away distortion­s.”

The World Bank this month provided $940 million in financing for four new projects in Uzbekistan, focusing on energy efficiency, horticultu­re and emergency medical services.

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