Tajikistan remains primarily agricultural country, says ADB study

The Tajikistan: Promoting Export Diversification and Growth study released by the Asian Development Bank (ADB) in August 2016 employs an inclusive growth diagnostic framework for analyzing the various factors that have hampered private investment and productive employment in Tajikistan. Five major challenges have been identified: 1) improving access to finance and reducing its cost; 2) […]

Asia-Plus

The Tajikistan: Promoting Export Diversification and Growth study released by the Asian Development Bank (ADB) in August 2016 employs an inclusive growth diagnostic framework for analyzing the various factors that have hampered private investment and productive employment in Tajikistan.

Five major challenges have been identified: 1) improving access to finance and reducing its cost; 2) providing stable and uninterrupted power supply; 3) improving the quality of transport infrastructure and logistics; 4) strengthening governance and the rule of law; and 5) addressing market imperfections that constrain new investment and economic activities.

High-quality health and education services as well as strong social protection will also be essential to the country’s more inclusive growth, according to the study.

The study shows that Tajikistan will need to explore more productive business and investment opportunities beyond its existing drivers of growth to be able to sustain its high economic growth in the long term. To significantly augment revenues from its aluminum and cotton exports, it has to diversify into other export products while improving the quality of its other current exports. For this, the country’s domestic production capabilities need to be strongly enhanced and its industrial structure upgraded from low-value, low-skilled production to a high-value, high-skilled one.

Tajikistan reportedly needs to deepen its industrial base and improve performance in agriculture and services to achieve its goal.  The major challenges it faces in its quest to become a modern and vibrant industrial economy are generating more private investment, diversifying and upgrading exports, and creating nonfarm employment opportunities.  The country can meet these challenges by addressing underlying reasons for low private investment and improving the business climate. 

The study notes that a vigorous industrial sector that generates sufficient decent employment opportunities is the key to Tajikistan’s future growth.  The country particularly needs to achieve sufficient export dynamism to induce productive investment, create adequate and decent jobs, and manage healthy foreign exchange reserves to help maintain macroeconomic stability and absorb external shocks.

In addition, while agriculture is still the main employment provider, there is great potential for improving its output and productivity.  Strong productivity growth in agriculture would help release its excess labor to the growing industry and service sectors while keeping wage pressure under control for the emerging new sectors.

With strategic and targeted policy interventions to support innovative business models on a competitive basis, the Tajikistan government can meet the real challenge of promoting productive industry and service sectors, the study says, noting that this will in turn help absorb workers released from a more productive agriculture sector and those generated by population growth.  

Article translations:

Related Articles

Оби зулол

Most Read

Join us on social media!

Recent Articles

Hajj 2026: New Rules and Restrictions Introduced in Saudi Arabia

Entry to Mecca is now only possible with a special permit.

Emomali Rahmon flies to Astana for the Regional Ecological Summit

President of Tajikistan Emomali Rahmon departed today for a...

Nexign and TelecomDaily: the telecommunications market in Tajikistan grew by 13.7% in 2025

A study showed that the country's communications market has grown to 4.9 billion somoni, and the dynamics are influenced by an increase in the subscriber base, growth in internet traffic, and expansion of mobile and fixed network coverage.

Tajikistan’s Parliament approves organized recruitment of migrants to Russia

The paperwork will be transferred to the home country, and employers will select employees in advance.

Creativity as an asset: why marketing in Central Asia is reaching a new level

Business expert in international projects for the support and development of media companies, Svetlana Lebedeva, on marketing and the media market.

European Immunization Week starts in Tajikistan

Information and awareness-raising activities are being conducted across the country to increase trust in vaccination and combat misinformation.

The plan to launch the CASA-1000 project in 2027 discussed in Dushanbe

The Ministry of Energy of Tajikistan, Afghan DABS, and other project participants held a series of meetings.