Uzbekistan and the World Bank
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Uzbekistan became a World Bank member in 1992, shortly after declaring independence in 1991 following the collapse of the Soviet Union. The World Bank has supported projects in Uzbekistan in the areas of education, infrastructure, agriculture, and water resource management. Uzbekistan's collaboration with the bank has been increasing, with IBRD and IDA lending reaching a recent peak of $500 million in 2015.[1] The World Bank has provided financing for 27 projects through the IBRD and IDA in throughout its relationship with Uzbekistan, with 15 active projects as of June 2017. Current IBRD and IDA projects total $1.9 billion.[2]
The Uzbekistan economy is currently in a period of sustained economic growth since 2002, with GDP growing 7.8% in 2016.[3] The World Bank attributes growth in 2016 to expansions in services, agriculture and the service sectors. Cotton is a major commodity comprising 14.2% of total exports in 2015, down from more than 20% in 2012.[4]
The World Bank's Systematic Country Diagnostic report released in 2016 identifies 10 constraints that limit the economic potential of Uzbekistan. Among these are low accountability and regional inequality in the public sector, infrastructure bottlenecks, regulatory barriers, inefficient land allocation in the agricultural sector, limited access to pre-primary and tertiary education, and unsustainable use of natural resources.[5] Taking into account the constraints listed in the SCD, the World Bank Country Partnership Framework for 2016–2020 highlights three Focus Areas to support the government's objective of achieving upper-middle income status by 2030. The focuses are private sector growth, agricultural competitiveness and cotton sector modernization, and public service delivery.[6]

