By Dmitriy Belyanin
How will the impending referendum affect
Kyrgyzstan?
On December 11, Kyrgyzstan will host a constitutional
referendum for transferring the country from a parliamentary-presidential
republic to a purely presidential one. The referendum is backed by President
Almazbek Atambayev, who has
repeatedly said he would not run for re-election in 2017. Kyrgyzstan has the
most liberal political regime in the Eurasian Economic Union and one of the
most liberal among the former Soviet republics. (As well as one of the most
corrupt.) This article analyzes problems that will remain with the transfer of
power to the Parliament, with a new President probable next year.
The Economy
Kyrgyzstan’s political outbursts are kindled by the youth
and poverty of its people. Of its 5.7 million residents, nearly half are
younger than 25. Only a bit more than a third of the populace lives in cities,
which may help account for why nearly a third of Kyrgyzstanis are poor. In contrast,
in its northern neighbor Kazakhstan, the share of the population living below
the poverty line – known as the poverty headcount ratio – was only 2.8% in
2014, said the World Bank.
Kyrgyzstan’s grinding poverty owes to its unemployment and
low productivity – and more generally to its botched transition to markets. In
the Nineties, many newly privatized enterprises, not supported by investments
and exposed to foreign competition, went bankrupt. Instability increased prices of key materials and equipment by
cutting supply and raising demand, which boosted the costs of producing other
goods. Furthermore, monetary policy tools, especially open-market operations,
were underdeveloped, which kept the government from controlling the money
supply. (In open-market operations,
the central bank exchanges securities for money, or vice versa, to precisely
manipulate the money supply.) Instability also created political risks, raising
interest rates and thus dampening investment.
In adjusting to the novel environment of markets, workers
became less productive, so firms would hire them only at low wages. In 1995,
the amount produced by an average worker in Kyrgyzstan was only 54% of the 1990
level. The decline was especially sharp for agriculture, wrote Boris Rumer.
Thanks to the small and impoverished population,
Kyrgyzstan’s economy is too small to exploit scale economies (i.e., the idea
that producing more will cut unit costs). Last year, the value of production
(gross domestic product, or GDP) was only $20 billion when adjusted for changes
in prices and exchange rates.
Kyrgyzstan is trapped in a vicious cycle: Economic
instability creates political instability, which stokes more economic
instability. In 2008, rising prices of energy and agricultural products, due to
poor harvests worldwide, fueled double-digit inflation, disturbing the
population. Inflation returned in 2010, fueling the second color revolution.
Table 1 shows key parameters of Kyrgyzstan in 2004-2016. The selected years
show development of the country under each of its four Presidents.
Parameter
|
2004
|
2007
|
2010
|
2013
|
2016E
|
Gross domestic
product, constant prices, % change
|
7.027
|
8.543
|
-0.472
|
10.534
|
3.515
|
Total investment,
% of GDP
|
20.847
|
20.945
|
23.744
|
26.044
|
30.716
|
Gross national
savings, % of GDP
|
25.772
|
14.966
|
17.635
|
11.035
|
12.273
|
Inflation, end of
period consumer prices, % change
|
2.764
|
20.052
|
18.932
|
3.970
|
6.997
|
Unemployment
rate, % of total labor force
|
8.500
|
8.200
|
8.600
|
7.652
|
7.379
|
General
government gross debt, % of GDP
|
92.909
|
56.805
|
59.726
|
46.102
|
72.337
|
Current account
balance, % of GDP
|
4.925
|
-5.978
|
-6.109
|
-15.008
|
-18.442
|
Source: International Monetary Fund, 2016 World Economic
Outlook Database
Table 1: Selected macroeconomic parameters of Kyrgyzstan (2004-2016)
The economy is open as well as small. Gross exports amounted
to 38% of GDP, though they were more than half of the economy in 2013, said the
Global Competitiveness Report. The export share fell because of recession in
Russia, which flattened demand for Kyrgyz-made products.
Being open, the economy is vulnerable to world trends, which
engenders instability as well as growth. The country exports cotton, textiles,
gold, mercury, natural gas, electricity, and dairy products. Remittances,
mostly from Russia and Kazakhstan, comprised more than a fourth of GDP in 2015,
reported the World Bank. In general, Kyrgyzstan has one of the most open
economies in the CIS. Its average tariff rate is 2.5%.
Especially vulnerable to global forces is Kyrgyzstan’s
tormented currency, the som.
Kazakhstan buys about 40% of Kyrgyzstan’s exports, not
including gold, so the swift weakening of the tenge last summer raised the tenge
price of what Kyrgyzstan sold to its northern neighbor. Incomes of Kyrgyz labor
migrants in Russia fell 30-40% due to ruble depreciation, reports Kloop.kg.
One challenge for Kyrgyzstan leaders is that most economic
policies have both positive and negative effects in the short run, so their
political consequences are rarely clear. Consider the country’s export tax.
While taxing exports decreases them, it also makes these goods cheaper at home
by increasing their domestic supply.
The political consequences of trade pacts are especially
murky. In 2015, Kyrgyzstan joined the Eurasian Economic Union and received $1
billion of Russian loans and grants for subsidies. Low tariffs among Union
members spur trade in the Union. These tariffs, along with low wages, give
Kyrgyzstan a reputation among producers as one of the cheapest countries in
Central Asia. On the other hand, the Union raises tariffs among non-members and
adumbrates political restrictions that Russia may someday impose.
Despite these complications, Kyrgyzstan’s macroeconomy has a
few fortes. Gross national savings as a share of GDP, which fell from 21% in
2011 to 14% in 2012, rose slowly to 14.2% in 2015, said the World Economic
Forum. The government has been racking up small deficits and surpluses,
dropping from 0.23% of GDP in 2014 to -1.3% in 2015. Its largest deficit was
-5.8%, in 2012. By reducing its red ink, the government takes pressure off
interest rates, enabling business to borrow more cheaply and thus to invest
more.
Kyrgyzstan’s financial system is puny. In a well-developed
financial sector, savings are invested in bank deposits or securities. Since
these assets can easily finance expansion of the capacity to produce, they can
raise output and employment. But in 2014, Kyrgyzstan’s
bank deposits amounted to just 17% of GDP. In comparison, for Kazakhstan, they
were 28%, said DataMarket. Market capitalization of listed domestic companies
of Kyrgyzstan came to just 3% of GDP in 2012. For Kazakhstan, the figure was
12% in 2011 and 11% in 2013, said the World Bank.
Fiscal reforms have been slow and uneven. The government
recently introduced a flat tax rate of 10% on personal and corporate income.
However, taxation is poorly enforced and administered, and the total tax burden
is only 21% of income. The problem is that government spending claims 38% of
income, reported the Heritage Foundation, so the fiscal reforms have not
enabled the government to balance its books.
Perhaps it is too soon to judge the reforms. In principle,
replacing a progressive tax with a proportional one encourages
entrepreneurship, because the tax penalty on additional income no longer rises.
(In a progressive system, the tax rate increases with income; in a proportional
system, the tax rate is a constant.) On the other hand, the reform raises the
tax rate on the poor, so income inequality may widen over time.
The government does a poor job of collecting taxes partly
because its complicated rules encourage evasion. A typical limited liability
company, with at least 60 employees, must make 51 payments to the budget per
year. For rich OECD countries, the average is 11 payments.
Fiscal expansions, which the government can finance by
borrowing, are common when governments need voters’ support. In Kyrgyzstan,
though, the government runs a deficit not only to get reelected but to avoid
another color revolution. Over time, the government has been taxing less and
spending more. Spending now exceeds 40% of GDP,
said the International Monetary Fund.
Financing fiscal expansions by issuing debt may crowd out
private investment. Higher interest rates on government securities attract funds
away from the corporate securities market, which is where firms borrow to
expand production. And the general rise in interest rates discourages private
borrowing. Nevertheless, crowding out is likely to be weaker in Kyrgyzstan than
in neighboring Uzbekistan, since the Kyrgyz government does not seize assets
and its securities markets are more transparent. Political stabilization after
the second Kyrgyz Revolution spurred economic growth in real GDP, due to
increased investment.
Even so, investment in Kyrgyzstan faces hurdles. Although
Kyrgyzstan is quiet now, the weakness of its central government makes a color
revolution more likely than it would be elsewhere. This possibility makes
government and corporate bonds prone to default. Agency ratings show that
Kyrgyz government bonds are riskier than those of many other CIS countries
(Table 2).
Country
|
S&P
|
Descrip.
|
Moody’s
|
Descrip.
|
Fitch
|
Descrip.
|
AM
|
-
|
B1, stable
|
Highly spec.
|
B+, stable
|
Highly spec.
|
|
AZ
|
BB+, negative
|
Non-inv. Grade, spec.
|
Ba1, negative
|
Non-inv. Grade, spec.
|
BB+, negative
|
Non-inv. Grade, spec.
|
BY
|
B-, stable
|
Highly spec.
|
Caa1, stable
|
Substantial risks
|
B-, stable
|
Highly spec.
|
GE
|
BB-, stable
|
Non-inv. Grade, spec.
|
Ba3, stable
|
Non-inv. Grade, spec.
|
BB-, stable
|
Non-inv. Grade, spec.
|
KZ
|
BBB-, negative
|
Lower medium grade
|
Baa3, negative
|
Lower medium grade
|
BBB, stable
|
Lower medium grade
|
KG
|
NR
|
-
|
B2, stable
|
Highly spec.
|
-
|
-
|
ML
|
-
|
-
|
B3, negative
|
Highly spec.
|
-
|
-
|
RU
|
BB+, stable
|
Non-inv. Grade, spec.
|
Ba1, negative
|
Non-inv. Grade, spec.
|
BBB-, negative
|
Lower medium grade
|
UA
|
B-, stable
|
Highly spec.
|
Caa3, stable
|
Default imminent
|
CCC
|
N/A
|
Key: AM - Armenia, AZ - Azerbaijan, BY - Belarus, GE -
Georgia, KZ - Kazakhstan, KG - Kyrgyzstan, MD - Moldova, RU - Russia, UA -
Ukraine, Descrip. - Description.
Source: Trading Economics
Table 2: Credit ratings and outlooks of former Soviet
republics
Although doing business in Kyrgyzstan is easy by Central
Asian standards, it is difficult by CIS standards (Table 3). Kyrgyzstan has
ranked 67th on the Ease of
Doing Business Index for the past two years. The country performs very well in
registering property and relatively well in dealing with construction permits
and getting credit. But getting electricity, paying taxes and enforcing
contracts are harder.
Country
|
|||||||||||
GE
|
24
|
6
|
11
|
62
|
3
|
7
|
20
|
40
|
78
|
13
|
101
|
AM
|
35
|
5
|
62
|
99
|
14
|
42
|
49
|
41
|
29
|
28
|
71
|
KZ
|
41
|
21
|
92
|
71
|
19
|
70
|
25
|
18
|
122
|
9
|
47
|
BY
|
44
|
12
|
34
|
89
|
7
|
109
|
57
|
63
|
25
|
29
|
69
|
RU
|
51
|
41
|
119
|
29
|
8
|
42
|
66
|
47
|
170
|
5
|
51
|
MD
|
52
|
26
|
170
|
104
|
21
|
28
|
36
|
78
|
33
|
67
|
60
|
AZ
|
63
|
7
|
114
|
110
|
22
|
109
|
36
|
34
|
94
|
40
|
84
|
KG
|
67
|
35
|
20
|
160
|
6
|
28
|
36
|
138
|
83
|
137
|
126
|
UA
|
83
|
30
|
140
|
137
|
61
|
19
|
88
|
107
|
109
|
98
|
141
|
UZ
|
87
|
42
|
151
|
112
|
87
|
42
|
88
|
115
|
159
|
32
|
75
|
TJ
|
132
|
57
|
152
|
177
|
102
|
109
|
29
|
172
|
132
|
54
|
147
|
Key:
AM - Armenia, AZ - Azerbaijan, BY - Belarus, GE - Georgia, KZ - Kazakhstan, KG
- Kyrgyzstan, MD - Moldova, RU - Russia, UA - Ukraine, Descrip. - Description.
Source: The World Bank Group
Table
3: Components of the Ease of Doing Business Index for CIS countries
It takes just 3.5 days on average to register property in
Kyrgyzstan, compared with about 22 days in Europe, Central Asia and rich
countries. Similarly, you can get construction permits more quickly (142 days)
than in affluent nations. In general, all four presidents of Kyrgyzstan have
encouraged free enterprise, partly to win business support in a politically
instable country, and partly because the nation is more poorly endowed with
natural resources than its northern neighbor, Kazakhstan. On the legal rights
index of the World Bank, which
ranges from 0 to 12 (higher numbers are better), Kyrgyzstan scores 8, compared
to 6.2 or less for Europe, Central Asia and high-income OECD countries.
Another sign of Kyrgyzstan’s evolution into a market economy
is its shedding of subsidies. In December 1998, Kyrgyzstan had to reduce farm
subsidies to join the World Trade Organization. The
WTO opposes such subsidies because they distort production, leading to
inefficiency. In theory, a competitive market in a simple world maximizes value
by ensuring that each consumer who is willing to pay the cost of producing some
good, can buy it. She is willing to pay the $2 cost of manufacturing a
toothbrush because it’s worth $3 to her. For the last buyer in the market, the
value to her of the toothbrush ($2) equals its cost of production. A subsidy
increases output beyond this point, meaning that some new units will cost more
to produce than they are worth to consumers.
Kyrgyzstan is more successful in providing soft inputs like
property rights than hard inputs. Electricity is expensive and difficult to
procure. Electrical costs average 892% of annual income per capita, compared
with 65% in rich countries. Power prices are high partly because a monopoly
dominates the market; no rivals threaten to undercut its price.
A hopeful sign is the spread of the Internet. In 2015, 30%
of the population used the Web, up from 20% in 2011. The Internet is a godsend
for entrepreneurs: Without it, they are chained to their locations. This
increases their fixed costs, raising prices and throttling supply.
The regime and its history
Political
controversy in Kyrgyzstan revolves on whether to empower the President at the
expense of the legislature.
In the 1990s, the political regime largely resembled those
of other Central Asian countries. President Askar Akayev strove to centralize
power in his hands while conducting superficial political reforms. During the
first election in 1991, President Akayev ran unopposed; in 1995 he was reelected
with over 70% of the vote. In the next year, a referendum approved a
constitutional amendment granting more power to the President and restricting
the power of the legislature. In 1998, the country imposed a moratorium on the
death penalty that many human rights activists welcomed. However, in July 1998,
the Constitutional Court let President Akayev run for a third term in 2000, and
he was elected for another five years. International observers said the election
was flawed.
During the early 2000s, the opposition condemned the Akayev
government, which then cracked down on opposition leaders. In March 2000, Felix
Kulov, former national security minister, was arrested for alleged abuse of
office. He was released in July 2000 but re-arrested in May 2002. That year, a
state commission showed that senior government officials had been responsible
for the deaths of five peaceful protesters in March, and the government of
Prime Minister Kurmanbek Bakiyev resigned. Nikolai Tanayev replaced him. In
November 2002, the opposition demanded Akayev’s resignation.
The President tried to calm the protesters with skin-deep
political reforms but failed. In February 2003, another referendum transferred
some presidential powers to the Parliament, but many argued that it assured the
President’s hold on power. Later, the February 2005 parliamentary elections
caused massive protests because opposition candidates were not allowed to run.
After the second round of the elections, protests escalated, inducing Akayev to
flee to Russia. Parliament appointed Bakiyev as the acting President and Prime
Minister, and it freed the opposition leader Felix Kulov from jail, dropping
charges against him. In April 2005, Akayev resigned.
Bakiyev’s victory in the July 2005 elections marked a new
era for Kyrgyzstan. In August 2005, he nominated Kulov to become Prime
Minister. But corruption and crime remained rampant, spurring protests.
In February 2006, protesters demanded constitutional reforms
and measures against crime and corruption. In November 2006, the besieged Bakiyev
approved a new constitution limiting his powers.
In the late 2000s, government dismissals and constitutional
amendments were frequent. In December 2006, the Kulov government resigned,
leading to early parliamentary elections. In January 2007, Bakiyev appointed
Azim Isabekov, previously Agriculture Minister, as the new Prime Minister. Nevertheless,
he was an administrative, rather than a political, figure, so he did not
satisfy the opposition, reported RT. He resigned in March, anticipating
opposition demonstrations. Almazbek Atambayev, a moderate opposition leader,
was named Prime Minister.
Though the Bakiyev administration compromised with the
opposition, it barely clung to power. In April 2007, a week-long demonstration in
Bishkek demanded Bakiyev’s resignation, and the police cracked down. In October
2007, voters supported constitutional changes, which the opposition condemned
as authoritarian. Bakiyev dissolved Parliament and announced new elections. In
November 2007, Atambayev quit, criticizing the President for nepotism and
corruption. In December 2007, Bakiyev’s party won 71 out of 90 seats in
questionable Parliamentary elections. In July 2009, Bakiyev won 76% of the
vote, but the opposition and the OSCE said the election results were falsified.
Foreign policy too was questionable. In February 2009,
Bakiyev accepted $2 billion in aid from Russia and promised not to prolong the
lease of the military base by the United States in the Manas Airport in
Bishkek. Nevertheless, in June 2009, he let the US Army stay after it offered $60
million to continue using the base. The opposition also blamed Bakiyev for
diverting Russian aid to his six brothers and two sons, who held key posts.
Rising unemployment and prices on housing and utilities ended
Bakiyev’s regime. In early 2010, several opposition newspapers were closed for
“damaging” publications about Bakiyev and his family. When it was reported on
April 7, 2010 that three major dissidents -- Omurbek Tekebayev, Temir Sariyev
and Atambayev -- were arrested, protesters called for their release and stormed
government buildings. Bakiyev fled to Osh in southern Kyrgyzstan but refused to
resign. However, the new government warned that he and his family would be
arrested if he did not. On April 16, he threw in the towel and high-tailed it
to Belarus. He still argues that his overthrow was illegal, report Michael
Coffey and co-authors.
Roza Otunbayeva, leader of the ruling Social Democratic Party
of Kyrgyzstan, became the head of the interim government. Having held government
positions in the Kyrgyz Soviet Socialist Republic and in the independent Kyrgyz
Republic as a moderate, she maintained closer ties to the Kremlin than to the
White House. She had supported Bakiyev during the Tulip Revolution but quickly lost
faith in his regime, reports The Telegraph. She served as interim
President from May 2010 until the end of 2011.
Atambayev was appointed Deputy Prime Minister and Head of
the Social Democratic Party in Zhogorku Kenesh, the Kyrgyz Parliament.
He became Prime Minister in December 2010. He sought a strategic partnership
with Russia and said Kyrgyzstan would gradually join the Customs Union. The US
aviation base in the Manas airport in Bishkek would function for four more
years, reported Vzglyad, a Russian business newspaper.
On June 11, south Kyrgyzstan exploded in ethnic turmoil. In
Osh and Jalal-Abad, about 400,000 ethnic Uzbeks had to leave their homes. About
400 people were killed, according to official statistics. Many Uzbeks sided
with the interim government, while many Kyrgyz supported Bakiyev, implying that
his overthrow may have fed the flames. Otunbayeva admitted that she could not
ease tensions and appealed for Russian assistance, but the Kremlin refused to
send in peacekeepers, unlike other Central Asian nations. Peace returned in
late June.
The government still denies justice to the victims of the
interethnic riots. Last April, Muhamad Bizurukov, an Uzbek on trial since 2011,
blamed for the 2010 violence, was sentenced to 13 years in jail but released in
August on parole. Related cases are pending.
International organizations criticize the probes into the
June 2010 violence. While visiting Central Asia last June, Ban Ki-moon, United
Nations Secretary-General, advised Kyrgyz authorities to investigate and try those
responsible for severe crimes, to review convictions that had led to torture,
and to cooperate with civil society “to promote interethnic reconciliation.” On
the fifth anniversary of the June 2010 conflict, the OSCE high commissioner on
national minorities pointed out that “a
sense of insecurity is still prevalent among the ethnic Uzbek community” and that
investigations had made “little progress.”
Nevertheless, political reforms have progressed since the
second color revolution. On June 27, 2010, a referendum transformed the country
into a Parliamentary-Presidential Republic. Over 90% of the voters backed the
new Constitution, which banned establishing political parties on religious or
ethnic grounds. Neither could police officers, military persons and judges join
them. Finally, the President can no longer appoint members of the Central
Election Commission.
In October 2011, Atambayev won 63% of the Presidential vote
in an election that had turned out 57% of the electorate. He had positioned
himself as a leader who could heal the country. Adakhan Madumarov and Kamchibek
Tashiyev, Atambayev’s main rivals, were southern nationalists; Tashiyev’s
rhetoric was harsh.
Under Atambayev, Kyrgyzstan has stabilized, but human rights
are still violated. Despite the ban on discrimination based on gender,
ethnicity or religion, women -- who make up 52% of the Kyrgyz society and 43%
of the labor force -- face domestic violence and are under-represented in the
legislature, where they hold less than a fourth of the seats.
In October 2015, Kyrgyzstan organized parliamentary
elections, with 14 parties, that contrasted sharply with elections elsewhere in
Central Asia. To participate, a party had to offer at least 120 candidates,
with each gender making up at least 30% of the list and with ethnic minorities
accounting for at least 15%. No party may hold over 65 seats in the 120-seat
Parliament, with a 7% threshold to qualify for taking seats.
The Social Democratic Party won the election with 27% of the
votes (38 seats in Parliament). Six parties qualified for Parliament.
International observers praised the elections as “competitive,” providing
voters “with a wide range of choices.” But ballot secrecy and the inclusiveness
of voters were concerns.
Last July four
parliamentary factions, including the ruling party, proposed a referendum to
amend the constitution. A referendum is legitimate if 30% of all voters
participate. The proposed amendments would further empower the Prime Minister
and enable a deputy of the Zhogorku Kenesh to become Prime Minister or Deputy Prime Minister. Atambayev
approved the referendum in September. Some of his foes argue that he could become
Prime Minister and use the amendments to his advantage. Atambayev denies that
he will hold any government position after 2017.
Predictions and recommendations
The re-election of the Social Democratic Party to the
Parliament in 2015, with no protests afterwards, suggests a satisficed populace.
Poverty, corruption and human rights violations persist, but many people have wearied
of instability.
Though Atambayev plans to step down as President, the Social
Democratic Party is likely to be re-elected to the legislative and executive
branches. All six political parties holding seats in Parliament are pro-Russian.
The Atameken Party -- which leans more towards the west than the other five and
is the most critical of the existing regime in Kyrgyzstan -- had received 8%,
the smallest share of votes, in the 2015 election. Chances are high that the amendments reforming the Prime Minister’s post will
pass, due to a low threshold (just 30% of the vote).
The transition to a pure Parliamentary republic spreads
power over more political figures, but it also weakens the separation of power
between the executive and legislative branches. The mainstream parties may take
advantage of this and pass restrictions on minor parties. Political parties may
narrow the gap between their programs and positions on foreign policy, to attract
voters. Tired of violent protests, most Kyrgyzstanis
will accept this trend.
What will be the main trend in foreign relations is less
clear. After the August 30 attack on the Chinese embassy, Kyrgyzstan will need
to strengthen ties with Beijing. China needs stability in Central Asia to
complete the Silk Road project, which will speed transport of Chinese goods to
Europe. Also, destabilization of the area increases the likelihood of protests
by Uyghurs in the Xinjiang region. China might not remain neutral.
Closer ties between Uzbekistan and Russia affect Kyrgyzstan.
Kyrgyz agricultural exporters face tougher competition for the Russian market,
which makes promises to extend welfare more popular. The Social Democratic
Party may become slightly more social democratic.
Russia may encourage Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan to narrow the
gap between their regimes, to prevent conflicts between them, because destabilization of the region makes it
vulnerable to extremists. Uzbekistan
will become more open, while Kyrgyzstan may adopt tougher laws against
extremist groups, which may lead to false convictions and to repression.
While the foreign-relations picture is murky, Kyrgyzstan’s
direction in its economy is crystal clear: It’s still heading toward markets.
Its liberal regulations benefit small businesses. Workers gain from
liberalization of migration to Russia and Kazakhstan under the Eurasian
Economic Union, which lets you become a guest worker without having to
register.
WTO rules restrict farm subsidies, but the government may
compensate rural residents with more education grants for their children or
other subsidies of goods that benefit third
parties. For example, a literate resident can learn to become a good citizen,
which helps all Kyrgyzstanis. The government must subsidize literacy – not
leave it up to the market to produce, since a teacher of reading skills to one
resident cannot collect payments from all Kyrgyzstanis, although they all
benefit from the resident’s literacy.
Despite their liberal tendencies -- or perhaps because of them
– Kyrgyzstanis are not enamored of the Eurasian Economic Union, which Russia
leads. In a study by the Eurasian Bank of Development of over 8,600 people in
each member state, the Union’s popularity in Kyrgyzstan fell from 86% in 2015
to 81% in 2016, reported Zanoza.kg. But this decline is too small to effect
withdrawal from the Union.
The som merits
some attention. Kyrgyzstan has a flexible exchange rate – that is, a currency
value set by the market, not by the government. So the som can lose value over time, in terms of foreign currencies like
the dollar. To use a simple though unrealistic example, the som’s
exchange rate may weaken from one som
per $2 to one som per $1. Such
depreciation raises the foreign demand for Kyrgyzstani goods, since a dollar can
buy twice as many som as before and thus
twice as much of Kyrgyzstani products. That higher demand will raise
Kyrgyzstani prices. That is, it will create inflation.
What’s wrong with inflation? Well, it imposes costs. Restaurants
must revise their menus; shoppers wear out their shoes (and patience) looking
for bargains. Most important, unanticipated
price changes complicate planning.
Buyers and sellers make mistakes; unraveling those errors slows down the
economy. Unexpected inflation also benefits debtors at the expense of creditors,
because the lender is paid back in weaker dollars than she had planned on.
Since wages are sticky in the short run, inflation will hurt workers, because
their paychecks won’t buy as much as before.
To quell inflation, Kyrgyzstan’s central bank can sell
securities for som, thus withdrawing
excess money from circulation. This reduces the amount of money chasing each
product, so its price will moderate. The bank can strengthen such open-market
operations by developing debt markets.
Conclusion
Though President Almazbek Atambayev has relinquished much
power to the Parliament and has said he will not run again, his political party
will assume more control, with the approval of the populace. Increased
competition with Kyrgyzstan’s neighbors and global economic trends can make the
ruling Social Democratic Party more socially oriented, even though its policies
are, and will remain, less democratic than those of western social democratic
parties.
Dmitriy Belyanin
has a Master’s degree of Business Administration in Finance and a Bachelor of
Arts degree in Economics from KIMEP University. Since 2007, he has been writing
on issues in economics and finance ranging from stock markets to environmental
economics. He is the associate editor of this blog.
Notes
During Atambayev’s
rule, Kyrgyzstan hosted the World Nomad Games twice, in September 2014 and last
September. The Games were in the city of Cholpon-Ata near Issyk-Kul. According
to Maxat Chakiyev, director of the Tourism Department, 50,000 tourists, of whom
over 5,000 were foreigners, attended the first Games. Revenues from these Games
were $9.8 million, while $2 million was spent on organizing the Games. World
media coverage of the Games burnished the country’s prestige. This and the increases
in tourism revenues contribute to the popularity of Atambayev’s team and his
party, making their re-election more likely.
Correction
Kyrgyzstan's referendum will be December 11, not December 4.
Correction
Kyrgyzstan's referendum will be December 11, not December 4.
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