IMPLICATIONS: This overview makes it clear that it is high time to continue the deregulation process that was started several years ago. A decrease of state regulatory and control functions in the business sphere should minimize the opportunities for state bureaucrats to engage in corruption. A simplified and clearer tax code with transparent taxation procedures needs to be adopted. In terms of budget transparency, the recently started practice of holding budget hearings on a continuous basis holds some promise. The main problem nevertheless lies in conducting institutional reforms. In many respects, for example in the notoriously corrupt customs system, reform is basically related to external structural changes. Laws which were adopted are frequently not working in practice. Local self-government institutions practically have no resources or power to carry out their functions. The centralization of the distribution of means ensures a low level of control on the part the local communities over the distribution of resources. The reform of state governance and public service is still fraught with problems, including outdated organizational and administrative structures, the remaining system of executive power, low salaries of civil servants, and the absence of a merit-based system of selection of civil servants. In terms of reorganizing ministries and administrative departments, significant steps have been taken in the past few years with the support of international organizations. Functional reviews led most of the ministries to reconsider their tasks and functions, leading to recommendations on the elimination of unnecessary and duplicating functions and the elimination of conflicts of interests. But in the absence of a monitoring and evaluation system, it was impossible to track the implementation of the recommendations provided. Provided political will is present, such a system could easily and speedily be introduced. In the legal sphere, dependence on executive power; the low salaries of judges, and the absence of reforms in the law enforcement system remain the main problems. To a significant scale, a “capture” of the judicial system has taken place. Judicial bodies face pressure from both political forces and the criminal underworld. Clearly, the eradication of the problems of corruption and state capture in the legal sphere will require serious resources and political will on the part of the government. No serious system of financial oversight exists in the government. Even such institutions as a system of state purchasing or budget oversight are absent. Corruption in the financial sphere, including in debt servicing, remains large. The further improvement of procedures directed to achieve greater transparency and accountability is necessary. The strongest element in the fight against corruption in Kyrgyzstan is civil society. In fact, all basic elements of civil society participation in the struggle against corruption are present. Civil society groups participate in decision-making, the press is free, access to information is expanding, and at the local level, community involvement and the participation of women can be observed. Yet very often, influence on these processes from authorities has been so significant as to transform civil society participation into a mere formality.
CONCLUSIONS: The successful monitoring of anticorruption measures requires the assessment of resources in several important spheres of anti-corruption efforts. In examining political, institutional, technical, financial and human resources, this researcher found that the most promising direction within the comprehensive approach to fight corruption is the development of civil society institutions. In this sector, there is a high level of readiness, estimated at 80 on a 0-100 scale. The least promising directions are public administration and civil service reform, where readiness is estimated at 45 on the same scale. Other sectors range in between these two – 46 for political reform, 50 for institutional reform, and 67 each for the legislative, financial oversight and spending policy reforms. The successful implementation of the above-mentioned anti-corruption measures requires the political will of the leadership to pursue reforms systematically, using administrative and preventive means on various levels. It is important to distribute scarce resources, identify weak spots, and to conduct systematic monitoring of anticorruption measures and their results.
AUTHOR’S BIO: Dr. Talaibek Koichumanov is a Fulbright Visiting Fellow at the Central Asia-Caucasus Institute & Silk Road Studies Program, in Washington DC. He is a former Minister of Economy and Minister of Finance of Kyrgyzstan.