PRESS RELEASEOctober 16, 2025

World Bank Supports Uzbekistan in Implementing Policy Reforms to Spur Job Creation, Private Sector Growth, and International Trade

WASHINGTON, October 16, 2025 – The World Bank’s Board of Executive Directors has approved a financial package of $800 million in highly concessional loans to support Uzbekistan’s policy reforms that aim to spur job creation, private sector growth, international trade, and increased competition in key sectors.

The government’s policy measures, facilitated by the World Bank, aim to mitigate the impact of energy tariff increases on low-income households; protect women from harassment and violence in the workplace; expand social protection services for vulnerable groups; enhance competition in the telecommunications, agriculture, and power sectors, as well as expand Uzbekistan’s international trade.

The World Bank’s support will help the government implement policy measures across the following areas:

  1. Social Protection: Increasing compensation payments to low-income households to offset rising electricity, heating, and gas tariffs, raising annual cash transfers from UZS 270,000 per family to UZS 1,000,000.
  2. Expansion of Economic Opportunities for Women: Adopting legislation and mechanisms to protect women from sexual harassment and violence in the workplace, as well as prohibiting employers from refusing to hire, reducing wages, or dismissing women due to pregnancy or having children.
  3. Expansion of Social Services: Creating conditions to open the market for delivering social services to vulnerable groups through accredited private sector and other non-governmental providers.
  4. State-Owned Enterprise (SOE) Reform: Establishing a National Investment Fund (NIF) to manage and privatize SOEs more effectively, as well as creating an independent telecommunications regulator to limit state dominance in Uzbekistan’s broadband and mobile services markets and to attract private investment into the sector.
  5. Agriculture: Introducing agricultural risk insurance, as well as advancing cotton sector reforms. The latter includes the adoption of a more flexible mechanism for setting farmgate cotton prices and enabling textile enterprises to purchase raw cotton directly from any farmer.
  6. Trade Liberalization: Accelerating Uzbekistan’s WTO accession process and expanding international trade, by streamlining export procedures, including the abolition of export permits for certain goods. Additional measures also include eliminating exclusive rights granted to specific actors in energy, oil and gas, chemical, agricultural, and other sectors that restrict competition
  7. Power Sector: Implementing measures to open the electricity distribution sector to private participation and allow independent renewable power producers to sell electricity directly to consumers. These steps will help scale up renewable power generation and attract greater investment in the power grid.
  8. Energy Efficiency: Introducing additional incentives to reduce GHG emissions in energy-intensive industries and measures to improve energy efficiency. These include establishing a National Energy Efficiency Agency, tasked with attracting private investment in energy-saving initiatives, and introducing financial incentives for solar power, heat pumps, and energy-efficient building retrofits.
  9. Green Public Procurement: Integrating environmental criteria into public procurement to prioritize purchasing of environmentally friendly goods and services when using budget funds.

Learn more about the World Bank’s operations in Uzbekistan.

PRESS RELEASE NO: 2026/ECA/018

Contacts

In Tashkent:
Mirzo Ibragimov
In Washington:
Sona Panajyan

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