A Country Report and Profile - Republic of Uzbekistan
A Country Report and Profile - Republic of Uzbekistan
A Country Report and Profile
Presented By:
Alfiya G. Mirzagalamova amirz@indiana.edu
Jason C. Holman jholman@indinanaedu
Dmitri Maslitchenko dmitri@mailroom.com
The concept of transition of the Republic of
Uzbekistan to the market economy consists of five principles formulated by its
President Islam Karimov:
1. Economy should have priority over politics.
Economic reforms should not follow the lead of political processes.
2. The State is the main reformer. The representatives
of legally elected authorities have to determine priorities and pursue balanced
policy of no social shocks.
3. Along with economic reforms it is necessary to
create a system of social protection of the Republic population especially of
most vulnerable groups.
4. Superiority of Law and Constitution.
5. Stage by stage movement to the market economy. The
transition to next stage only after the current stage targets have been met..
[1]I. Political and Economic Background
Politics
To understand the politics of Uzbekistan
it is important to delve into it=s
most recent history. The leader from 1959-1983 was Sharaf Rashidov, who ruled
in a quasi-feudal fashion, much like the newly elected leader. Rashidov kept
the USSR content through a combination of patronage, corruption, and repressive
behavior. Once Mikhail Gorbachev was elected, Rashidov was the prime target
for his drive to eliminate corruption. Although there was an upsurge of
national identity among the Uzbeks and a feeling of victimization by the
thousands of corrupt officials who where soon imprisoned, incredibly through
more repression the elections for new leaders would go unopposed. The
Republic of Uzbekistan declared its independence from the former Soviet Union
on August 31, 1991. Although it was not recognized by the United States until
December 25, 1992. Uzbekistan is a member of the United Nations and the
Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). Although Glasnost led to many open
media discussions of the environment and ethnic issues, the elections held in
1990 were one-sided. The main opposition party was not allowed to stand,
therefore leaving many communist candidates to be elected. Islam Karimov was
first elected President in 1990 by the Supreme Soviet and later was reelected
by a popular vote in 1991.
In 1995 Karimov held a national
referendum which would extend his term into the year 2000. He had 99% of the
electorate=s support. Karimov proclaims he is a supporter of AEastern Democracy.@
He stresses the importance of stability of eastern democracy over it=s western counterpart. The stability that Karimov
suggests many believe is just a ploy for Karimov to use his dictatorship power
to cling to the old world status. Karimov is one of the strongest supporters
of continued cooperation among the Soviet Republics. Karimov supported the new
Union Treaty in spring of 1991 and did not oppose the August 1991 coup in
Moscow. Once the coup collapsed Uzbekistan declared independence. Karimov
proclaims Uzbekistan is a multiparty system, yet the Erk (Freedom) Democratic
Party, the Birlik (Unity) People=s
Movement (BPM) and the Islamic rebirth Party (IRP) have been banned.
[2]Policy makers still remain suspicious of unregulated
market mechanisms, although Karimov officially commits to a market-oriented
reform. Prices were slowly liberalized and the new trade policies are less
harmful toward exports. The import tariffs proposed in 1993 are preferential
toward CIS communities and extra low tariffs toward Central Asian countries.
It is going to be very difficult for him to explain why many of the neighboring
Central Asian countries are becoming richer through liberalization and
privatization while Uzbekistan continues to stay stable, but poorer then the
other nations. Karimov stresses stability as a reason why Uzbekistan has not
seen the high inflation rates characteristic to other CIS communities in
transition.
2Karimov gives little mention to human rights. He
believes that economic stability is necessary for socio-political stability.
In his new book, Along the Road of Deepening Economic Reform, Karimov states, Apreparation, discussion and adoption of fundamental
laws regulating and providing guarantees of human rights and freedoms, rights
and freedoms of public organizations and freedom of conscience and religion
have been something principally new in practical law making in this country.@ He also briefly mentions the women=s rights and acknowledges their special role as Awomen-mothers@
and presses for better child care provisions.
Economy
3At independence, the economy was dominated by cotton
production. Uzbekistan hoped to benefit from this by selling the cotton on the
international market, but the early 1990s were a time of depressed prices on
world cotton markets. This created a dispute with Russia, which responded by
seeking to purchase cotton on the world market. Uzbekistan lost a considerable
amount of revenue due to this conflict with Russia. Eventually the two
countries reached an agreement to barter Uzbek cotton for Russian petroleum
products.
Other important agricultural products
include grain, fruit, vegetables and natural silk from cocoons. The main
problem of Uzbekistan is that about three-fifths of the country is desert or
semi-arid desert: almost all cultivated land must be irrigated. This has
resulted in the gradual drying up of the Aral Sea. By the 90's the available
water supply had been exhausted to the point that there was no possibility of
increasing the amount of land used for agricultural purposes. Grain production
only covers a quarter of Uzbekistan=s
total consumption. Therefore Uzbekistan relies heavily on imports from
countries such as the United States to support their supply of grain.
Uzbekistan complains that the USSR destroyed it=s grain-growing capacity in order to create the cotton monoculture.
This has remained a very difficult obstacle for Uzbekistan and grain continues
to be a major import.
4Uzbekistan=s
other primary product exports include gas and minerals. Uzbekistan has few
energy sources besides gas and untapped hydro power. Although a major oil
field was recently discovered in the Fergana Valley in 1992. Uzbekistan is the
largest importer of oil by all the CARs. The most accessible mineral export is
gold, of which Uzbekistan was the USSR=s
second-largest producer. Joint ventures are bringing foreign technology to
exploit Uzbekistan gold mines. Other mineral deposits include silver, lead,
copper, zinc, and tungsten. Uzbekistan=s
minerals have a low ore content, which suggests that it would not be as
valuable on the world market.
5After World War II, Soviet resources were concentrated
on rebuilding industrial enterprises in European areas. With less investment
the growth rate of Uzbekistans industry declined. There was a long trend of
falling industrial growth rates. Manufacturing industry in Uzbekistan was
originally developed in close relation to its primary product base which of
course was cotton and fruits and vegetables. Machinery for the cotton sector
was a major output and food processing industries were also important. These
are the only two substantial forms of manufacturing in Uzbekistan. This is
somewhat disturbing considering the large amounts of resources that are
available.
6The general problem was of lack technical ability and
low standards of quality. The main approach to correct this problem was to
encourage joint ventures. Many joint venture agreements were signed in 1992
and 1993, but there was little actual foreign investment. There was also a
problem with Uzbekistan=s communication capabilities. In 1993 a joint venture
was formed with the Turkish company, Teletas, to install seventy
thousand lines.
Uzbekistan also would like to become the
hub of Central Asia. When the Aeroflot fleet was shared out after the dismemberment
of the USSR, Uzbekistan utilized its share of the planes productively to earn
vast amounts of hard currency. It created an international network in the
spring of 1993 with the goal of making Tashkent a hub for budget and travel
between Europe and Asia. Flights would be established to Karachi, Delhi,
Kuala, Lumpur, Bangkok, Beijing, Frankfort, and London. Israel provided
training assistance to Uzbekistan Airways, and the airline raised its
credibility by purchasing several Airbuses.
Economic reform in Uzbekistan has been
very slow. Until 1994 Mr. Karimov opposed reform. Since then he has had to
start some reforms to obtain IMF backing for his stabilization program and to
get World Bank financing. Uzbekistan has been officially committed to economic
reform since independence. The government has favored gradual change, and the
pace has become increasingly slower as the years have went on. Labor market
and enterprise reform have been limited, and indeed the ultimate reason behind
Uzbekistans slow price liberalization has been to maintain the value of real
wages and subsidies. The government has promised to keep wage and benefit
increases ahead of future price rises.
7Privatization in Uzbekistan has progressed extremely
slow. Karimov dominates economic policy; he has issued a raft of decrees that
are on occasion contradictory, but aim to convince the multilateral
institutions that reform is taking place. The first form of privatization took
place in 1994. The process lacked transparency, was corrupt and resulted in Mr
Karimov=s allies owning the viable firms. Other obstacles are
that land liberalization ahead of establishing a guaranteed water supply would
be meaningless for the irrigation-based agricultural sector. In industry, not
only has privatization of state enterprises been slow but there was also very
little privatization created from many small-scale entrepreneurs.
8II. Budgetary and Monetary Conditions
Uzbekistan=s statistics are notoriously inaccurate and in small quantities. The government
views economic data as a state secret, and circulation of the more informative
data is restricted. All figures from Uzbekistan must be treated with a degree
of caution as the government is trying show that the country is handling the
post Soviet government better then its neighbors. The country is attempting to
switch from the old communist national accounting method using National
material product (NMP), which excludes most services and depreciation, to the
standard System of National Accounts (SNA).
What is clear is that Uzbekistan=s economy has been in decline since the collapse of
the Soviet Union. After a 3.7 % fall in 1991 National material product
declined by 14.4% in 1992. GDP in those two years has dropped by 0.5% and
11.1%. In 1993 the fall in GDP was 2.4 % according to IMF estimates, with
national material product down by 3.5% mainly due to continued government
subsidies. The IMP initially estimated that, due to tighter policies, GDP
contracted by 10.1% in 1994. However, the Uzbek authorities claim that despite
a severe credit crunch and a confiscatory change of currency, GDP shrank by
only 2.6%, the figure that the IMF now accepts.
9Net Material Product
1989 1990 1991 1992 1993
Total(Rb m)
At current prices 21,588 23,402 49,636 386,071 3,686,800
Real Change ( %) 3.1 11.3 -3.7 -14.4 -3.5
Per Head (Rb)
At current prices 1,091 1,157 2,407 18,287 170,622
Real change (%) 0.8 8.9 -5.5 -16.4 -5.7
*Derived from the World Bank mid-year population
estimates.
Budget Deficit
Uzbekistan=s government budget has suffered from large deficits since the collapse
of the Soviet Union. The IMF has put the 1993 fiscal deficit at 12% of GDP,
while the governments figure released through the World Bank was 2.5%. The
main reason for the deficits is lost revenue subsidies from the Soviet Union.
Uzbekistan had one of the largest subsidy share of revenue compared to many of
the other (CIS) countries. During the 1980s the proportion of revenue actually
increased form 20.8% in 1987 to 43.2% in 1990. Soviet grants which has once
accounted for 7% of GDP in 1987 rose to 19.5% of GDP by 1991.
10III. Expenditure Policies and Assignments
Although Uzbekistan is now engaged in
the necessary fiscal and revenue-raising reforms demanded by multilateral institutions,
very little revenue is received from taxes. Corruption, weak institutions,
economic recession and poor tax compliance have hindered revenue collection
severely. The government claims that actual revenue to GDP has risen in recent
years from 26.4% to 41%in 1993. Given continued state control of the economy,
tax compliance among state enterprises would tend to be greater than in
countries with a growing private sector, although figures may be overstated.
On the expenditure side, increased outlays on defense and security, welfare
payments, and subsidies to industry have been the most important developments
since 1991. Increased expenditure was financed through huge expansion of
domestic credit, montised by courtesy of the Russian Central Bank until 1993
when this tactical trend was eliminated once it was found to be unsustainable.
The government then went to the IMF. The figures on the preceding page show
this information
11State Budget
(Rb bn)
1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993
Revenue 9.7 11.8 15.1 30.2 139.8 1,814.5
of which:
Turnover Tax 3.3 3.8 4.0 6.1 3.3 n/a
VAT 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 38.4 477.1
Excises 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 9.5 44.9
Company income Tax 1.7 1.3 1.5 3.8 23.9 382.9
Personal Income tax 1.1 1.5 1.3 1.8 11.4 145.3
Grants from Union Budget 2.3 3.6 6.4 11.4 0.0 0.0
Expenditure 10.1 11.0 14.9
32.4 193.9 1,923.4
of which:
Economy 4.6 5.0 8.1 5.9 20.9 392.7
Defense and Public Order n/a n/a n/a 0.2 11.7 n/a
Social and Cultural 5.2 5.5 6.2 9.2 70.8 n/a
Balance -0.4 -0.8 -0.2 -2.4 -54.1 -108.9
% of GDP -1.4 -1.0 -1.2 -3.6 -12.1 -2.5
* 1993 data
are from the World Bank. They exclude non-budgetary accounts.
Sources: IMF, Economic Review: Uzbekistan; World Bank,
Statistical Handbook: States of the Former USSR, 1994
IV. Tax Structure and Administration12
Corporate Taxation
Profit Tax
Uzbek entities ‑ taxed on their profits from all
sources worldwide.
Foreign Entities ‑ taxed on profits from the
entrepreneurial activities of their establishments in Uzbekistan.
Foreign entities receiving income from Uzbek sources
other than through Permanent Establishments are subject to withholding tax on
the gross amounts of the income without reduction for any expenses.
The general profit tax rate is 37%. This rate is
reduced to 25% for entities with foreign investment of 30% or greater.
A tax return and activity report should be filed with
the tax authorities by February 15. An audit opinion or an agreement for audit
services should also be submitted by the appropriate deadline.
Social charges
Employers must make social insurance and employment
fund contributions, as well as contributions to a trade union if applicable.
The total amount payable, which is deductible for profits tax purposes, is 38%
to 40% of each employee's gross salary, made up as follows:
Fund Rate
Social insurance 36%
employment 2%
Trade union (if applicable) 2%
Individual Taxation
A resident is defined as an individual who is
physically present in Uzbekistan for 183 days or more in a calendar year.
Residents are taxed on their worldwide income, while non‑residents are
taxed only on their Uzbek sources income.
Taxable income for 1995 and 1996 is taxed at the
following rates:
Taxable income (less annual non‑taxable minimum)
Up to 2 annual minimum wage 15%
2 to 5 annual minimum wage 25%
5 to 10 annual minimum wage 35%
Over 10 times annual minimum wage 40%
Social security contributions
1% of the gross salary to the Social Insurance Fund.
Deductions and Exemptions
All income is taxable in Uzbekistan unless it is
specifically exempt. The list of specifically exempt income includes alimony,
gift, severance and pension income.
Capital gains
Capital gains in the disposal of shares are exempt for
taxation. Capital losses are not deductible.
Other taxes and fees
Value Added Tax ("VAT")
VAT was introduced in Uzbekistan on February 15, 1991.
The current rate is 17%.
VAT is levied on turnover from the supply of all goods
and services (including barter transactions), unless they are specifically
exempt. Imports are exempt. Though, VAT is levied on the Uzbek seller's markup
of imported goods. Exported goods and services are specifically exempt from
VAT. Exported goods are defined as having cleared customs. Exported services
are defined as being supplied to a "foreign person". For the
determination of whether services are exported, neither the place of providing
the services not the place where the benefits are used are considered, only
that the purchaser is a foreign person (entity). It could be argued that Uzbek
VAT legislation allows representative offices of foreign legal entities (which
are non‑resident), paying for services in foreign currency through
authorized Uzbek banks to also be classified as "foreign person".
Effective January 1 1996, the exemption on exported
goods and services is only applicable if the importing country does not impose
VAT on exports to Uzbekistan. This restriction is especially important with
respect to some members of the CIS as VAT is charged on exports to member states.
The VAT legislation of Uzbekistan allows a credit for
VAT incurred, when such goods or services are "charged to the cost of
production".
Excise taxes
Excise taxes are payable by domestic producers and
importers of excised goods. The list of excised goods is determined by the
Cabinet of Ministers and includes tobacco, jewelry, gasoline, liquor and other
goods. Exported goods are exempt. Tax rate vary from 5% to 75%. The amount of
excise tax is determined by the taxpayer, based on the volume of goods sold and
established tax rates on such goods.
Property tax
The 2% rate tax is based on the historical cost of
fixed assets used in production. Legislation specifically includes buildings,
machinery, equipment and vehicles. Accumulated depreciation does not reduce
the taxable base. The following assets are specifically excluded from he
taxable base for property tax purposes:
‑ housing, social and cultural facilities;
‑ environmental protection assets;
‑ agricultural equipment;
‑ transportation networks (including roads and
pipeline);
‑ communication and power transmission lines
(including
‑ maintenance structures);
‑ communication satellites; and
‑ automobiles.
Profit tax is deductible for profits tax purposes.
Subsurface use tax
Taxes on the mining, and oil and gas industries.
Subsurface uses tax is deductible for profits tax purposes.
Land tax
A fee on land owners is imposed at a fixed rate per
hectare.
Vehicle fees
A minimal fee on motor vehicle owners is imposed at a
fixed rate per horsepower. Individuals must also pay this fee, though only at
half the corporate rate. Only vehicles registered for road use are subject to
this tax (e.g. not those used for production which would be subject to property
tax).
In addition there is a fee on the purchase of vehicles,
defined as a percentage of the purchase price of the vehicle excluding VAT or
duties, 5% for cars and 10% for trucks, buses, trailers and semi‑trailers.
Road use tax
All entities are subject to road use tax which is
applied to gross sales, excluding VAT and excises. For transportation companies
a rate of 2% and for all other companies a rate of 1% applies. The tax is
deductible for profits tax purposes.
Water use fee
There is a nominal charge for the use of water
resources at a fixed rate per cubic meter of water consumed. For most
companies, the rate is 0.09 soum per cubic meter. The fee is deductible for
profits tax purposes within statutory water use limits.
Local taxes
There are numerous different taxes, though most are
insignificant except for the administrative burden. Example of more significant
local taxes include:
C
Tax on advertising costs. In
Tashkent the rate is 5% of total expense.
C
Fee for cleaning the local
territory, payable by entities and individuals conducting entrepreneurial
activities. In Tashkent the rate is 0.5% of gross receipts.
C
Fee for the right to trade,
payable by entities and individuals conducting retail trade. In Tashkent the
rate is two minimum monthly wages per month.
Revenue collection problems13
C
High tax rates on modest tax bases
reduced not only by economic contraction but also by various exemptions.
C
Weak tax administration compounded
by corruption.
C
The effective tax burden on those
who comply with the tax code is increased since large numbers of taxpayers
successfully evade taxes ‑ equity and efficiency problems.
C
Corruption and abuse of authority
by poorly paid tax administrators are serious problems.
C
Another major cause of poor tax
revenues is dollarization and the continued use of barter, payment in kind.
The Investment Policy of Uzbekistan
Priority areas14
1. Gold‑mining and non‑ferrous
(Uzbekistan ranks 4th in the world in terms of gold reserves).
2. Power engineering.
3. Processing of cotton (40% of the gross agricultural
production is cotton, however only 10% of produced raw cotton is processes in
Uzbekistan, the rest is exported as raw material. The existing textile industry
is obsolete).
4. Processing of vegetables and fruits (The production
makes up 60% of the total fruit and vegetables production of the former USSR;
agricultural infrastructure development needed ‑ processing,
transportation, storage facilities, packing).
5. Transport and communication.
6. Tourism (4000 architectural monuments, many of them
are under the protection of UNESCO;. world famous cities Samarkand, Bukhara,
Khiva; tourism infrastructure is a potential area of investment).
7. Financial and monetary. Create a network of banks
and insurance institution.
8. Environmental Protection (degradation of the
ecosystem of the Aral Sea, irrational use of water resources).
Guarantees and privileges granted to foreign investors15
1. If subsequent legislation of the republic of
Uzbekistan impairs investment conditions, then the legislation which was valid
at the time of making the investment shall apply for a period of time not
exceeding 10 years.
2. Companies=
profit tax shall be reduced by:
C
20%, for an export share of 5-10%
of the total production;
C
30%, for an export share of 10-20%
of the total production;
C
40%, for an export share of 20 to
30% of the total production;
C
50%, for an export share of 30% or
above of the total production.
The purpose here is encourage export oriented
manufactures and producers. "The great success stories of economic
development in the last decade have been the newly industrialized countries of
East Asia, especially the so-called "Four Tigers" (South Korea,
Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore) and, increasingly, Thailand and China. In these
countries, rapid growth of manufactured exports has produced dramatic increase
in income. NICs have undertaken a host of interventionist measures to create
incentives for export-oriented manufacturing firms, often in particular
targeted industries at particular stage of development."16
The heritage of the old socialist system - exports of
primary commodities and raw materials (cotton and cotton products in case of
Uzbekistan)- has to be gradually replaced by exports of manufactured goods.
"It makes a difference not only because of the recurring problem of gluts
resulting in falling process in commodity markets but also because of the
greater potential for raising technological capabilities".17
3. Receipts in hard currency earned by a company due
to increase in export production (product, jobs, services) shall be exempt from
profit tax.
4. A 25% profit tax shall apply to the profits of
Joint Ventures with a foreign capital of above 30%.
5. Joint Ventures with a foreign capital investing
into projects in priority industries included in the Investment Program of
Uzbekistan shall be exempt form taxation for the first five years of
operations.
6. Joint Ventures which specialize in agricultural
products and the processing thereof (except for wines and strong alcoholic
beverages), consumer products, and construction materials, medical equipment,
machines and equipment for agriculture, light and food industries, recycling of
waste materials are exempt from taxation for two years from the date of
registration.
7. The profit tax base is decrease by 30% of the
expenses for environmental protection.
8. Dividend on governmental bonds are exempt from
taxation;
9. Joint Ventures in which the foreign investor=s share accounts for a least 50% shall be exempt of
profit tax provided that whole tax amount is re-invested into the development
and expansion of production of consumer goods.
10. Exporting companies are exempt of VAT for
materials resources used in the production of exported goods (jobs, services)
11. Beginning July 1994 through December 31, 1997 all
commercial banks including those with foreign capital, as well as the branches
and subsidiaries of foreign banks operating in Uzbekistan are exempt from
profits, property, land and vehicle taxes.
V. Intergovernmental Financial Relationship
The Statute of the Republic of Uzbekistan "About
Taxes on Enterprises and Entities" establishes revenue sources of the
State budget of the Republic of Uzbekistan, State budget of the Republic of
Karakalpakstan18 and local budgets for the
following expenditures:
C
Social Security Payments;
C
Businesses regulation;
C
International payments;
C
Stabilization of the foreign
currency circulation;
C
Stimulation of extraction of
mineral resources; and
C
Environmental protection.
Uzbekistan has a unified statewide tax policy for all
layers of government. Local governments are entitled to levy taxes within the
format of the state wide tax policy.
Tax revenue is transferred to the budget of
Uzbekistan, budgets of the Republic of Karakalpakstan, regions, Tashkent city
(the capital) and local budgets according to the norms established annually
during the process of budget approval for the respective fiscal year.
Local governments impose local taxes in their
jurisdictions in full accordance with the Uzbek laws and based on the general
tax policy of Uzbekistan.
The authorities levying a specific type of tax
establish:
C
the taxpayer;
C
the tax base;
C
the tax rate;
C
the procedure of calculation and
payment;
C
exemptions and privileges;
C
life time of the tax.
IV. Social Insurance
In most transition countries proposals to reform
social security have included the establishment of minimum retirement
benefits, compulsory employment‑related benefits, unification of
treatment across occupations, increases in the retirement age, and steps to
reduce access to benefits by younger working pensioners. It is important that
pension and social security reforms help to insure adequate levels of
protection without overburdening contributors to the system. This will require
better collection of private sector contributions and improved targeting of
benefits, including tying future eligibility of pension benefits to past
contributions.
As a part of the transformation process, most
transition countries have introduced unemployment insurance schemes. In
Uzbekistan unemployment benefits were roughly 80 percent of the average wage in
1993, although the generosity of the scheme was matched by onerous
administrative procedures, which ensured that few individuals qualified.19
Uzbekistan:
A Country Report and Profile
Presented By:
Alfiya G. Mirzagalamova amirz@indiana.edu
Jason C. Holman jholman@indinanaedu
Dmitri Maslitchenko dmitri@mailroom.com
[1]Pomfret, Richard. The Economies of Central Asia.
Copyright 1995 by Princeton University Press.
[2]Uzbekistan:
Master of its Destiny. BISNIS - Uzbekistan report. 10 August 1995.
3The Economist Intelligence Unit. Country Profile.
1995-1996
4Pomfret, Richard. The Economies of Central Asia.
Copyright 1995 by Princton Universtiy Press.
5The
Economist Intelligence Unit. Country Profile. 1995-1996.
6The
Economist Intelligence Unit. Country Profile. 1995-1996.
7The
Economist Intelligence Unit. Country Profile. 1995-1996.
8The
Economist Intelligence Unit. Country Profile. 1995-1996.
9The Economist Intelligence Unit. Country Profile.
1995-1996.
10The
Economist Intelligence Unit. Country Profile. 1995-1996.
11The
Economist Intelligence Unit. Country Profile. 1995-1996.
12"A
Tax Guide to Europe. Uzbekistan", Arthur Andersen, April 1996
13
IMF, World Economic Outlook, May 1996
14The
Investment Guide for Foreign Companies, National Bank for Foreign Economic Activity
of the Republic of Uzbekistan
15
Guarantees and Privileges granted to Foreign Investors by the Legislature of
the Republic of Uzbekistan, Appendix to Presidential Decree as of May 31,1996
16
Stephen C.Smith, "Industrial Policy and Exports Success: Third World
Development Strategies reconsidered"
17
Stephen C.Smith, "Industrial Policy and Exports Success: Third World
Development Strategies RECONSIDERED".
18An
autonomous republic within the Republic of Uzbekistan
19
IMF, "World Economic Outlook", May 1996, p.77
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