IMF Staff Country Reports

Kyrgyz Republic: Selected Issues

February 16, 2023

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Format: Chicago

International Monetary Fund. Middle East and Central Asia Dept. "Kyrgyz Republic: Selected Issues", IMF Staff Country Reports 2023, 092 (2023), accessed 12/12/2025, https://doi.org/10.5089/9798400232725.002

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Summary

This Selected Issues paper discusses governance challenges in the Kyrgyz Republic. This paper aims to assess various aspects of governance in the Kyrgyz Republic and identify some of the key challenges in this area. Governance reforms in the Kyrgyz Republic can leverage linkages to the global economy and structural transformation to deliver higher and more inclusive growth. Combating corruption and strengthening governance, including of state-owned enterprises and public finances, and improving the regulatory environment and the anti-corruption; and Anti-money Laundering and Combating Financial Terrorism (AML/CFT) framework, are critical steps to improve the business climate and promote private sector-led growth. Reforms in these areas have a significant potential to increase efficiency of allocation of public resources and the delivery of public services. The IMF’s analytical work has shown that governance reforms could raise the country’s growth rates by about 1.2 percentage points per year. Strengthening control of corruption and regulatory quality, reforming state-owned enterprises, and enhancing transparency and accountability of the public sector are important priorities to pursue.

Subject: Climate change, Climate policy, Environment, Expenditure, Greenhouse gas emissions, International organization, Monetary policy, Poverty, Social assistance spending

Keywords: Central and Eastern Europe, Central Asia, Climate change, climate change policy, climate change prospects in the Kyrgyz Republic, Climate policy, developments in poverty, Europe, Global, Greenhouse gas emissions, inclusion indicator, Middle East and Central Asia, poverty in the Kyrgyz republic, poverty rates in the Kyrgyz Republic, Social assistance spending, SSNS poverty mitigation effect