Kazakhstan is the largest economy in Central Asia and a key hub for regional trade and investment. Since emerging from the transition recession in 1996, Kazakhstan has experienced real GDP growth of 5% per annum, while labour productivity and investment have also grown substantially, particularly in the first decade of the 2000s. The main driver of the country’s strong economic performance has been and remains the extraction and export of its vast natural resources. Kazakhstan’s economy is also highly internationalised, and it has been the country’s openness to foreign investment and technology, as well as its engagement with the international trade architecture through institutions like the World Trade Organisation (WTO), that has allowed it to develop sophisticated industries so quickly in these sectors.
Nevertheless, Kazakhstan’s socio-economic resilience is challenged by limited private-sector development. Extractives-fuelled growth has led to a concentration of economic output that is non-inclusive and vulnerable to external shocks. Extractives-driven growth has failed to drive the development of a private, dynamic non-resource tradable sector – and may in some respects have impeded it. Investment and the most productive jobs are concentrated in a handful of sectors that generate relatively little employment, in which SMEs play only a minor role, and which are vulnerable to changes in global demand for hydrocarbons. In the longer-term, the global push for net zero emissions, to which Kazakhstan is committed, may drastically reduce the competitiveness of the country’s main growth drivers.
The key to further socio-economic development and resilience lies in the development of a robust and diversified private sector. To achieve this, the government must address the policy issues that have hitherto stymied private sector development, while also looking forward to the changing needs of firms in a rapidly transforming global context.