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Tajikistan is the poorest of the five former Soviet Central Asian republics, with an estimated four-fifths of the population
living below the poverty line. Basic services and infrastructure are poor to non-existent. Although less than 10 per cent
of the country's land can be cultivated, Tajikistan has a sizeable agricultural sector accounting for one-quarter of GDP and
employing half the workforce. Large quantities of cotton are produced under ecologically ruinous schemes established during
the Soviet era. Grain, fruit and vegetables are also grown. In recent years, the country has been badly hit by a regional
drought, an earthquake and a series of mudslides (caused by poor land use) which forced the Government to make several appeals
for international food aid. Tajikistan's economic prospects lie with exploitation of its mineral resources, which include gold, aluminium, iron, lead,
tin and mercury ores. There are coal deposits as well as small amounts of natural gas, which together with hydroelectric schemes
meet the bulk of the country's energy needs. There is little heavy industry other than mineral processing (mainly aluminium);
light industry is concentrated in food processing and textiles. The Tajik economy suffered severely during the 1990s from the dislocations caused by the break-up of the Soviet Union followed
by two outbreaks of civil war. It has recovered slowly since the 1997 peace accord but some positive results are now showing:
the hyper-inflation which blighted the economy during the civil war has now been cut to around 10 per cent. Annual GDP growth
in 2005 was a healthy 10 per cent. The Government's economic reform programme, which is now being implemented, comprises a
typical recipe of privatisation, deregulation and fiscal reform. Tajikistan secured membership of the IMF and World Bank in
1993; it also belongs to the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development as a 'Country of Operation'. It has received
substantial aid from Middle Eastern donors, including Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the Islamic Development Bank. External donors
now supply around 60 per cent of Tajik government income. Tajikistan now has its own currency, the Somoni, which was introduced in October 2000 to replace the five-year-old Tajik rouble.
In April 1998, Tajikistan was admitted to the Customs Union of the Commonwealth of Independent States, a loose federation
of former Soviet republics, whose members continue to dominate Tajik trade. Further afield, The Netherlands and the UK are
important trading partners. In July 2001, Tajikistan acquired observer status at the World Trade Organisation.
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| Business Etiquette |
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Tajikistan is looking for foreign investment in a number of sectors, particularly in aluminium processing, which needs extensive
modernisation. Foreign businesses are not barred from any economic sphere: although land, livestock and mineral resources
are owned by the Government, it is possible to lease them. Foreign concerns are allowed to participate in the privatisation
programme. Foreign investments in certain priority areas, which are as yet undefined, are eligible for tax holidays - including
import and export duties - although, in effect, each foreign investor negotiates his or her own terms and many are better
than the standard laid down in law. All foreign investors must be registered with the Ministry of External Economic Affairs.
Office hours: Mon-Fri 0800-1700.
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| Commercial Information |
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Ministry of Economy and Foreign Economic Relations 42 Rudaki Street, Dushanbe 734002, Tajikistan Tel: (372) 232 944. Fax: (372) 210 404.
US Department of Commerce Business Information Service for the Newly Independent States USA Trade Center, Stop R-Binis, 1401 Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20230, USA Tel: (202) 482 4655. E-mail: bisnis@ita.doc.gov
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