Kazakhstan Strategy and Policy
The Kazakhstan Strategy and Policy (2005) report, authored by Ricardo Hausmann, Akash Deep, Rafael Di Tella, Jeffrey Frankel, Robert Lawrence, Dani Rodrik, and Andrés Velasco, analyzes Kazakhstan’s economic transformation and outlines strategies for sustainable, diversified growth amid rising oil wealth.
While Kazakhstan has achieved rapid growth and macroeconomic stability, it faces structural risks common to resource-rich economies: over-heating, Dutch disease, volatility, rent-seeking, and the resource curse. The report calls for prudent fiscal management through savings in the National Fund, coordinated monetary and exchange rate policies to maintain competitiveness, and financial regulations to prevent overexpansion. It emphasizes diversification beyond oil via targeted industrial policies that encourage private-sector discovery and innovation, rationalized trade policy aligned with WTO principles, and institutional strengthening to ensure transparency, accountability, and an independent bureaucracy.
This report is a collection of policy memos, which are introduced below.
Kazakhstan’s Macro Challenges Ahead: A Summary of the Views
by Ricardo Hausmann
Ensuring a Competitive and Stable Real Exchange Rate: A Macroeconomic Policy Strategy
by Ricardo Hausmann
Oil-exporting countries tend to have strong and volatile real exchange rates that conspire against their ability to diversify the economy. Real exchange rate appreciation and its associated Dutch Disease have received ample attention. Less well known is the fact that a recurring feature of oil-exporting economies has been a real exchange rate cycle associated with the ups and downs of oil revenues. The central bank and the government can fight what they deem to be unwarranted real appreciation through an arsenal of potential tools that include fiscal contraction, unsterilized intervention, reserve requirements, capital adequacy requirements, requirements on foreign borrowing and the regulation of pension funds.
On the Tenge: Monetary and Exchange Rate Policy
by Jeffrey Frankel
This memo discusses the determinants of the real exchange rate and discusses alternative options for the choice of monetary regime, such as floating exchange rates, fixed exchange rates, and various alternative nominal anchors for monetary policy (including the currently popular regime of inflation targeting). Two polar cases are rejected, as likely to turn out to be too constraining for Kazakhstan while a newly proposed regime, called Peg the Export Price (PEP) would accomplish the desired shifts in the terms of trade automatically. The goal would be to achieve the benefits of a nominal anchor, and yet remain robust with respect to changes in the terms of trade that an uncertain future could bring.
Monetary and Exchange Rate Policy: An Alternative View
by Andres Velasco
Exchange rate and monetary policies in a country like Kazakhstan can be guided by many objectives, but there ought to be four priority goals: to provide a nominal anchor for the economy; to insulate the economy as far as possible against foreign nominal shocks, such as inflation in trading partners’ economies or sharp movements in the nominal exchange rates of economies with which Kazakhstan is closely associated; to insulate the economy as far as possible against foreign real exchange rate shocks; and to allow the relative price non-tradables to rise as the role of oil in Kazakhstan’s economy grows and the economy’s purchasing power rises. The previous discussion suggests that a fixed exchange rate (even if the peg is to a basket) and a purely floating exchange rate (with no concern whatsoever for the course of the real exchange rate) are probably inappropriate policies for Kazakhstan. The objectives outlined above could, in principle, be achieved by one of the two regimes: A crawling exchange rate with wide bands around it or an inflation target married to a managed float. This memo explores these policy options.
Notes on an Industrial Strategy for Kazakhstan: The Growth Challenge
by Dani Rodrik
Developing countries confront two sorts of growth challenges. The first revolves around the problem of igniting growth. Luckily, this is not Kazakhstan’s problem. The economy is growing rapidly, and there is a foreign investment boom driven by oil discoveries. The second kind of growth challenge is that of sustaining growth. Comparative experience suggests that sustaining growth is usually harder than igniting it. Kazakhstan must meet this challenge if the country is to converge to the living standards that prevail in the advanced economies. The institutional transformations can be summarized under two headings: (i) institutions that provide resilience to shocks; and (ii) institutions that maintain productive dynamism.
Financial Sector Reform
by Akash Deep
Both in its scope and its achievements, the process of financial sector reform in Kazakhstan over the past few years has been remarkable. A decade of ambitious measures, including banking consolidation, the provision of deposit insurance, the establishment of an independent regulator, and pension reform, has led to a sharp rise in financial intermediation and a high degree of confidence in the banking system. These accomplishments have fetched rich dividends for the economy. However, recent developments also reveal that further and deeper reforms are required to consolidate and sustain the rapidly expanding financial sector as it seeks to support and facilitate an even larger and more diversified economy. This note examines a selected set of issues within the financial sector of Kazakhstan that might require reform, and makes related recommendations. The main issues that will be addressed in this note are as follows:
- Deposit insurance and the credit boom
- Foreign currency borrowings and reserve requirements
- Pension fund investment options
Trade Policy
by Robert Z. Lawrence
This memorandum deals with three related issues. The importance of integrating trade policies into Kazakhstan’s overall economic strategy, the opportunities created by its WTO membership, and its regional trading arrangements.
Institutions
by Rafael Di Tella
There is a long list of “Institutions” that common sense suggests would help a country grow. However, beyond the obvious (and some exceptions noted below), there is no evidence suggesting that some institutions are better than others. Though the importance of institutions is a key lesson emerging from the analysis of market reforms in Latin America and post-Soviet economies, there is little agreement amongst economists as to which institutions are deemed to be most relevant. Unfortunately, people at the World Bank, Davos, and others have to talk about institutions. This creates the false impression that there is some magic solution out there that countries should adopt. The evidence in favor of decentralization or raising wages to deter corruption – two institutional reforms that Kazakhstan is considering – is not great. In this spirit, Kazakhstan faces a challenging agenda for institutional reform. We must tackle the problem of institutional reform at two distinct conceptual levels: we can think of concrete rules and legislation that contain the workings of the economy – call this institutions type 1 – or at a more general level, we can think of the belief systems that citizens have as containing the institutions and the market interactions – call this institutions type 2. This memo explores these two institutional types in more depth.
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