IMPLICATIONS: This natural resources windfall is the strategic window of opportunity for Astana to address four structural defects of its energy-driven economy: corruption; capital flight; a dysfunctional social safety net; and the money-losing nature of the non-extracting sectors of the economy. High-level corruption and capital flight may be the most difficult to resolve. Most often perpetrated, or aided and abetted, by top government officials, it is a net loss to the people of Kazakhstan. Police measures are in themselves not effective, as law enforcement is corrupt and controlled by the perpetrators. The fish is rotting from its head. The government is unlikely to crack down on organized crime and corruption which plague the economy. As long as the government is not prosecuting the most odious “exporters” of capital, even if they are politically connected insiders, the local economy will remain too inhospitable – and bureaucracies too corrupt – to make investment in non-energy sector attractive. Second, it is the time for the Kazakhstani government to bring internal energy prices, including natural gas and coal, to world levels. Today’s high oil prices will allow to provide subsidies to retired or laid off workers, while closing down inefficient, energy-guzzling enterprises and hiking railroad tariffs. Energy can be exported to increase revenue. Some of the workers in remote “company towns” can be relocated to more livable venues. Third, social sector reform is long overdue. While salaries are higher in the energy sector by a factor of at least two in Kazakhstan, most of the gigantic profits are not invested back home to create jobs outside of the oil and gas sector, nor are tax proceeds efficiently distributed to support the elderly, sick and poor.
CONCLUSION: The Kazakh government can battle the Dutch disease by stimulating non-energy business development and job creation, by simplifying registration for new business and reducing corporate taxes and employment payments for these newly created entities. As USAID and a number of NGOs repeatedly demonstrated around the world, micro-lending to boost entrepreneurship is yet another way to decrease unemployment and poverty. In addition, some of the structural unemployment – 20 percent in Kazakhstan, even higher in energy-poor Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan – can be alleviated by opening the doors of the oil and gas sectors to workers from the areas hit with particularly high unemployment. This can be achieved by loosening severe interior ministry residence registration rules, which are a hick-up of the old Soviet era “propiska” system, and by providing better living conditions in the company towns owned by the extracting industries. As World Bank Vice President Johannes F. Linn has suggested recently, regional cooperation is likely to alleviate some of the structural asymmetries and stimulate growth. Clearly, cooperation on water utilization, pipelines, transport, and commerce is the most logical. Unequal income distribution in Kazakhstan, where average salary is barely over $1,000 a year, (and even more so in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan with only $200-$300 per capita incomes), may lead to economic dislocation, social conflict, and uncontrolled migration. Kazakhstani leaders were forewarned. Both Astana and international financial institutions should address these disparities while the energy bonanza lasts.
AUTHOR’S BIO: Ariel Cohen, Ph.D., is Research Fellow in Russian and Eurasian Studies at the Heritage Foundation and author, with Gerald P. O’Driscoll, of “The Road to Economic Prosperity for Post-Saddam Iraq” (2003). His expertise includes international energy security.